[[quoteright:350:[[WesternAnimation/PhineasAndFerb http://static.tvtropes.org/pmwiki/pub/images/unfavourite_pf_7171.JPG]]]][[caption-width-right:350: And the father prefers his dog, [[IHaveNoSon Only Son]].]]

The nasty end of ParentalFavoritism. Where there's an Alpha wolf, there's got to be a Beta. When there is a first banana, there is a second banana. This is the person in the family who can't get a break. For example, this is the child who's the big [[WhyCouldntYouBeDifferent let-down]] to their parents, the daughter that was supposed to be a son (or vice-versa), the child the parents had by accident when they'd already decided they didn't need another mouth to feed. But all in all, this is basically the kid who is always getting the short-end of the stick.

A regular line that may be entailed with this is a variant of, "Honestly, (insert name), why can't ya be more like (insert favorite's name)?"

Frequently, being The Unfavorite is a FreudianExcuse for a character who's a particularly pathetic loser. If the ParentalFavoritism was garden variety (or even a product of his/her imagination), PG-rated {{Wangst}}, this is probably being played for comedy, a weak excuse for being a failure. If the favoritism was particularly vicious, however, up to and including abuse, The Unfavorite becomes a more tragic character -- most probably TheWoobie. Sometimes, however, the Unfavorite is almost suspiciously well-adjusted.

A variant is where The Unfavorite is actually highly successful and [[TheDutifulSon dutiful]], but can never get the [[WellDoneSonGuy approval of his parents]], simply because their sibling will always do "better" in their parents' eyes. ("Hey look, dad, I won the Nobel Prize for Physics!" "Only one? That's nothin' -- your brother won Employee of the Month at Shop 'n Go 3 times!"). The Unfavorite doesn't need to play second fiddle to an actual sibling, and can even be an only child. Unfavorites without a sibling are often unwanted or unexpected children and can even, in perhaps an extreme case, be passed over for the family pet.

The audience's attitude towards the unfavorite is often based on [[AgeAppropriateAngst what age the character is]]. There's a common perception that an adult character should really have gotten over this by now and moved on, even if the viewers/readers empathize with them. A child character, on the other hand, is likely to get the audience's unreserved support.

Age notwithstanding, this is usually a character you sympathize with, because we're supposed to root for the disadvantaged; expect the favorite either to be rubbing their status in their sibling's face, be an AloofBigBrother, or completely unaware of the situation. It is, however, completely possible that the character is interpreting some behavior as favoritism -- and the other character also regards himself as the Unfavorite. (Cue SiblingRivalry.) Also, another possible situation is that the favorite is indeed aware of the situation, sympathize with the unfavorite, and may even start the "talk with the parents" scene.

And Heaven help the poor kid if [[TooGoodForThisSinfulEarth the favorite child is dead]]. (Possibly having received the status of "favorite" by dying.) See also YouShouldHaveDiedInstead. The same thing goes if TheUnfavorite was a result of DeathByChildbirth, where the family hates the kid for [[MaternalDeathBlameTheChild "murdering" their mother.]]

Can easily escalate into CainAndAbel. May be rooted in a DeathByChildbirth. May cross over with WellDoneSonGuy if the Unfavorite wants some recognition. If the favorite of the parents isn't even a member of their family, it's a case of WhyAreYouNotMySon. When each parent has one favorite and one UnFavorite, it's JacobAndEsau.----!!Examples

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[[folder:{{Anime}} and {{Manga}}]]* Poor Shui Long of ''Manga/HaouAiren''. Despite being the most talented of his siblings at the family trade (medicine), he ''never'' got his clan's favor and recognization. Which would drive him to later join TheTriadsAndTheTongs.* ''Manga/YuGiOh'': Due to being not his blood-related child, the head of the Ishtar family treated his adoptive son Rishid like like a servant rather than his son.* Jun Manjoume of ''Anime/YuGiOhGX'', disowned by his brothers for his inability to live up to the family name* In ''Anime/YuGiOhZexal'', due to his recklessness and anger issues, IV suffers from this, as well as a dose of MiddleChildSyndrome due to older brother V and younger brother III. As such, their father Tron has taken steps to keep IV LockedOutOfTheLoop about the family's plans. Tron's frequent belittling of IV's capabilities and lack of care for IV also do not help matters at all.* In the ''Anime/{{Mazinger|Z}}'' series, Kenzo Kabuto had two biological sons (''Kouji and Shiro'') and two adoptive children (''[[Anime/GreatMazinger Tetsuya and Jun]]''). Although Tetsuya was clearly his favorite, he still showed he cared for Kouji and Shiro. However, he got Jun completely neglected, treating her like a soldier, not making anything about her feelings of abandoment and her inner tensions, and he seldom shown he cared for her. It went so far that, before [[spoiler:[[KilledOffForReal dying]]]] after his [[spoiler:HeroicSacrifice]], he pleaded Kouji that he treated Tetsuya like his brother and took care of Shiro...but he did not mention Jun at all. Nonetheless, his attitude drove Jun to think she could not be dependant on someone else and to develop a very strong-willed and self-reliant personality, not to mention a CoolBigSis bond towards Shiro.* In ''Manga/{{Gintama}}'', [[spoiler:there's Itou, whose negligence resulted in him becoming a puppet for Shinsuke and the antagonist to the Shinsengumi Crisis Arc.]]* Somewhat in the ''Emma'' manga. While their mother loves them all dearly, Richard Jones is distant at best to any of his five children (we rarely, if ever, see him interact with his youngest son, Colin) and while there are a few moments to indicate he does care for them, he seems to base his love for his children on how much they behave/don't embarrass him in high society. This means he will inevitably butt heads with his oldest son and heir, William Jones, who doesn't put much care into the rules of high society or much effort into taking over the family business (at least at first). Top this all off with his love affair with the titular Emma, a maid, and you have a recipe for the official Unfavorite of Mr. Richard Jones.* Variation: In ''Anime/MagicalGirlLyricalNanoha'', DarkMagicalGirl Fate [[spoiler:is a clone of Precia Testarossa's deceased daughter, Alicia. Fate has Alicia's memories of Precia being a loving and kind mother, but Precia is abusive to Fate and sees her only as a tool for bringing Alicia back to life. Averted later on by her adoptive mother Lindy, who loves her just as much as she loves her biological son. It's also averted in ''Manga/MagicalGirlLyricalNanohaInnocent'', where Precia is shown to be a DotingParent to Fate and Alicia.]]* ''Manga/{{Naruto}}'':** Subverted[=/=]ZigZagged with Sasuke. At first it appears that Sasuke, while being fairly intelligent and very talented, is constantly being neglected in favor of his [[ChildProdigy genius]] [[AloofBigBrother older brother]] Itachi, whom his father always praised with the words "as expected of my child", while Sasuke only ever got an unimpressed "Become more like Itachi." But later we see that this only applies to his father Fugaku, while his mother Mikoto is shown treating Sasuke with great kindness while the only line we ever see her speak to Itachi is "Do your homework!", so it looks as if [[JacobAndEsau each parent favors one of the two]]. Later in the story, some dissent arises between Itachi and his parents, [[spoiler:as Itachi didn't think too highly of their plan to take over the village and start a world war]], and it becomes apparent that his parents cared more for his incredible talent than for Itachi as a person. Fugaku soon turns his interest to Sasuke, tells him ''not'' to be like Itachi, complains about his older son to the rest of the family, and Mikoto states that when they're alone, all her husband and her ever talk about is Sasuke, cementing that ''Itachi'' was the ''actual'' unfavorite all long. [[spoiler:But ultimately, their parents loved them both very much. When Itachi comes to kill them, both Fugaku and Mikoto are shown to be aware of his massive turmoil, and they tell him that they understand his reasons and decisions, offering no resistance as he tearfully executes them. Their only request was that he'd take care of his brother, and Fugaku tells him that despite the differences in beliefs and the paths taken, he was (and always has been) proud of Itachi, no matter what.]]** Gaara, because everyone in his family (and his entire city) is scared of him, or at least of the demon sealed inside him. [[spoiler:He was conceived only to be a container for the demon and be a living weapon, and his mother died giving birth to him and his father, the Kazekage, hated him because of this.]] Subverted in the end, [[spoiler:as it turns out that his mother Karura's love for him is what makes his sand protect him and his resurrected father realizes that he does, in fact, love his youngest son.]]** The rather passive [[ShrinkingViolet Hinata]] is this compared to her more aggressive sister.* Johnny Joestar, from Part 7 of ''Manga/JoJosBizarreAdventure'', always lived in the shadow of his elder brother Nicholas, even though he was just as competent a horse jockey as Nicholas. After Nicholas was killed in a horse-riding accident when his horse was spooked by a mouse that resembled a pet Johnny released into the wild instead of kill on his father's instructions, Johnny has a major falling out with his dad, who proclaimed that "[[KickTheDog God took the wrong son]]".* Seta Sōjirō from ''Manga/RurouniKenshin'' is a particularly tragic example of this trope. [[spoiler:So much that his adoptive family (stepmother, half-brothers, younger uncles) try to ''kill'' him for being an illegitimate child. [[SelfMadeOrphan He kills]] ''[[SelfMadeOrphan them]]'' [[SelfMadeOrphan instead]].]]* ''Manga/FruitsBasket'':** Machi Kuragi is such an unfavorite that her parents automatically assume she attempted to ''kill'' her little brother, despite her (more or less believable) claim that she was just trying to keep him warm.** Kagura is loved by her mother, as well as Yuki (in a way), Hiro, and Kisa, but Momiji and Kyo definitely fell into this trope. As Momiji says, mothers of Zodiac children either become overly protective or reject their child completely. ** The main character Tohru even gets this from her father's family mainly due to their dislike of her mother, pretty much treating her like dirt when she is alone with them. Only her grandfather likes Tohru and her mother.** This is bizarrely inverted with Yuki's family. Ayame is the unfavorite, which means that he was more or less free to do as he wanted, which led to him being a self-centered {{jerkass}} in school, but ultimately meant he could move out on his own and start his own business. Yuki was the favorite (at least in the sense that his parents thought him more likely usable to get money and move higher in society), so he was forced to be the already unstable Akito's playmate, was psychologically tortured, implied to have been hit by his mother for trying to avoid it, and was generally so screwed up that he couldn't interact with other people at all.* Somewhat averted in ''Anime/DigimonAdventure02''. Ken Ichijouji is revealed to have originally been the butt of this trope, but when his more-liked and more-talented older brother Osamu was killed in a car crash ([[IWishedYouWereDead after Ken thought and wished for that to happen]]), it began a chain of events that lead to him [[FaceHeelTurn turning to the dark side]], becoming more skilled than his brother ''ever'' was (thanks to evil powers), and becoming the series' BigBad temporarily before joining the team.** In ''Anime/DigimonFrontier'', it seems that Kouichi was his his father's "Unfavorite" as Koji was taken by his father when he left their mother and divorced and he re-married another woman. This causes feelings of anger, jealousy, and betrayal in Kouichi.* Subverted in ''Manga/ThePrinceOfTennis''. Yuuta Fuji feels he's the unfavorite since his middle brother Shuusuke is talented, handsome, and popular at their school, so he leaves and transfers into another school and its dorms. But that genuinely ''hurts'' Shuusuke, who [[BigBrotherInstinct really loves and cares for Yuuta]] and ''just didn't know'' what his brother was going through, becoming a huge StepfordSmiler out of the pain he feels upon Yuuta abandoning him. [[spoiler:It'll take more than a year to reunite them.]]* ''Anime/CodeGeass'': Lelouch Lemperouge spends a good portion of his life believing that not only are he and his sister Nunnally their father's unfavorites, but that their mother Marianne was too, since she was the only Imperial Wife to come from common origins. Eventually, he learns that [[spoiler:his parents fell in LoveAtFirstSight, and by extension, Lelouch and Nunnally were his favorite children. Furthermore, they both wanted Lelouch to help them with their plan to make the world a better place.]]** Lelouch then turns this around with a tear-driven CallingTheOldManOut speech, declaring that [[spoiler:if they actually cared, then they would have retrieved their children from Japan BEFORE starting an all-out war, and that their devotion to their cult plans ended up consuming their sanity and capability to love other people; despite desiring a world where people stopped engaging in countless wars and family back stabbings, they ended up unfavoriting every individual on the planet. Then he indirectly kills them by ordering THE WILL OF EARTH ITSELF with his Geass to stop their plans.]]* In ''Anime/MobileSuitGundam00'''s second season, there's an unfavorite that doesn't even need a family [[spoiler:(they got killed by terrorists several years ago)]] to feel this way. [[spoiler:Lyle Dylandy thinks that several of the Celestial Being members expect him to be just like his deceased twin older brother, Neil "Lockon Stratos" Dylandy. While Lyle doesn't ''hate'' Neil per se (in fact, we first see him when he's visiting Neil's grave), he doesn't like like this situation -- so after taking up Neil's Lockon mantle, he decides to downplay his own and ''considerable'' fighting and piloting skills to make himself look different from him. With some CharacterDevelopment from both parts in the conflict, Lyle soon starts to gain the appreciation of Neil's TrueCompanions for the person he ''is''.]]* ''Anime/HellGirl'' episode 16 features a disturbing twist on this trope. The episode revolves around [[spoiler:Yumi and Yuki, a pair of twin girls in a traveling circus -- Yuki is praised and doted upon by the ringleader, while Yumi is kept locked in a back room and frequently abused. Initially, the audience is led to believe that Yumi has summoned Enma Ai to exact revenge upon the ringleader, only to find out too late that the real target is ''her sister''. Ai takes Yuki to hell, then, giving Yumi ''her'' chance to be the favorite.]]** Season 3 features a boy who becomes The Unfavorite in his family before the sibling is even born. [[spoiler: He ends up ''sending the baby girl to hell'', also before she is even born. The worst part? He assumed that doing this would make his stepmother stop "hating" him and lashing out at him for the tiniest things...and the end of the episode shows the family all laughing together on an outing. In other words, he was ''right.'']]* ''Manga/ZekkyouGakkyuu'' has Haru think of herself as this in ''Make-Believe Sisters''. She's a third-grader and gets scolded over small things, whereas her younger sister, Mii, is being pampered and babied and loved. Her parents love both of their daughters and it's shown that Haru was just as heavily pampered, when she was younger, but seems to not remember this so well. [[spoiler: Turns out horrible when, during a FreakyFridayFlip, Mii-as-Haru throws Haru-as-Mii off the balcony, ''just'' as their bodies revert to normal. And her parents saw Haru killing Mii.]]* Played with in ''Anime/MobileFighterGGundam''. It's implied that, due to being ''much'' younger as well as BookDumb, Domon felt inferior to his BadassBookworm older brother Kyouji in the eyes of their father, TheProfessor Raizou Kasshu. Unlike other cases, though, Dr. Kasshu doesn't show deliberate cruelty towards Domon, who finds another father figure in his martial arts teacher Master Asia and leaves home to train with him... Fast forward 10 years and Domon finds himself with a BrokenPedestal of a mentor, a dead mother, a [[HumanPopsicle cryogenically frozen]] father, and an ''evil'' AloofBigBrother who's become a wanted criminal...** [[spoiler:Nope; when Raizo is exonerated and thawed out in the final episode, he tells Domon that he's proud of him and always has been, and Domon's being a fighter rather than a scientist like himself or Kyoji was never an issue. And Domon is genuinely happy upon hearing this.]]* In the ''DragonballZ'' special it is revealed that Vegeta has a younger brother, who was exiled from their homeworld because he was too weak to be any good as a fighter (like Goku himself).* Also played with in ''Anime/MobileSuitGundamSEED'', with AcePilot Mu la Flaga. [[spoiler:His father Al de Flaga was so peeved with Mu being a normal child instead of a perfect vehicle for his father's ego (and for worse, he was ''very'' similar to his mother) that he disowned the boy, practically locked him away, and [[CloningBlues cloned himself]], the result being Rau le Creuset.]]** ...who is ''himself'' an Unfavorite [[spoiler:due to his short telomeres giving him frail health and a limited lifespan. Adaptations of ''SEED'' state that Rau was abandoned by Al de Flaga when he was very young, once Al found out.]] This is part of why Mu empathizes with him very late in the series.* Abo Ozawa in the baseball manga ''StripeBlue''. His older brother Bantarou is the closing pitcher on a professional team that owes its recent success solely to him. Being that Abo is ''also'' a baseball pitcher, he has to work extra hard to stand out, even to his own parents, despite frankly having not very formidable skills.* ''Anime/NeonGenesisEvangelion'': Shinji gets this so damn much. Even taken by itself, his relationship with his father is defined by Gendo's neglect and a cold-blooded insistence that he pilots a walking death machine under horrible conditions. But aside from that, Gendo has Rei, whom he treats as a surrogate daughter. Shinji and Rei become friends, but the fact that his father likes her better clearly bothers him. While Shinji is hard-pressed to get his father to even glance at him, many characters note on how surprisingly caring Gendo is to Rei. Asuka even points out to Rei, "You're Commander Ikari's favorite, aren't you?". In keeping with the typical rules for favorites, [[spoiler:Rei bears a close similarity to (and is a clone of and integral in the plan to revive) Gendo's dead wife Yui.]]* Played with in regards to Belarus of ''Webcomic/AxisPowersHetalia'', who ''thinks'' she's The Unfavorite of her older brother Russia because of their older sister Ukraine and Russia's subordinates, the Baltic brothers (Lithuania, Estonia, and Latvia). This leaves the girl, well... [[BrotherSisterIncest rather]] [[{{Yandere}} unstable]]. (Russia ''does'' care, but on the other hand he has his own issues ''and'' her BigBrotherAttraction freaks him out. Not to mention he seems to be personally closer to Ukraine.)** [[RomanticRunnerUp Canada]] might as well be invisible next to his brother [[LargeHam America]]. ** England is hated by his older brothers [[AllThereInTheManual (Scotland, Wales, and most likely Ireland as well)]].** Roman Empire was a well-intentioned Empire, but loved North Italy more than [[JerkassWoobie South Italy]]; the Chibitalia chapter said that he took Italy with him when he had to run away, but was shown to have left Romano. As a result, while Romano ''does'' care for his brother in a very {{Tsundere}} way, he's not exactly happy and his self-esteem problems ''show''... [[JerkAssWoobie but he isn't necessarily much better than anyone else]]* [[spoiler:George]] from ''Manga/ParadiseKiss'' is the [[HeroicBastard ilegitimate son]] of a rich, influential man and a former model. His father pays for his and his mother's expensive lifestyle, but has [[LonelyRichKid no actual relationship with them]], and his mother is very vocal about how much she resents him because becoming pregnant ruined her modelling career.* Definitely Ageha from ''PapillonHanaToChou''[=:=] as an infant, her mother sent her to live with her grandmother in the country because she couldn't stop crying; her twin sister Hana/Kana (the translators kept switching) is popular and glamorous and steals her potential boyfriend; she's even screwed over by her only [[PoisonousFriend "friend"]]. No wonder she's almost DrivenToSuicide. [[spoiler:Fortunately, her relationship with her mom improves dramatically when they finally start talking to each other. Kana/Hana, however, is becoming uneasy with her sister's newfound confidence...]]* Asagi Ayase of ''Manga/{{Yotsuba}}'' gets far more than her share of crap from her mother. It's played for laughs, since Asagi tends to retaliate in kind, but at least one flashback has shown she's gotten this treatment for years. The fact that Asagi ''is'' like her mother has something to do with it.* Moroboshi Ataru from ''Manga/UruseiYatsura'' is another only-child example of this trope. His parents are constantly lamenting the fact that he was ever born, in his presence. Played pretty much entirely for laughs.** They also wistfully mention how much they wanted a little girl, making Ataru the Unfavorite to a sister who doesn't even exist.* Sachiko in ''Manga/WithTheLight'' loves both of her children -- autistic Hikaru and his unafflicted little sister Kanon -- equally; it's her mother-in-law who plays unfavorites. Having Kanon to interact with and a hard time accepting the fact that Hikaru's not going to "get better" and be exactly like "normal" people means that she is more affectionate with the girl.* In ''Manga/ThereBeyondTheBeyond'', both of the kingdom's twin princes are named Virid Visette Viridian. The one who would eventually become the [[AxeCrazy "Mad Prince"]] was left to be abused and forgotten in a cell, while his brother got to be doted on in the palace.* ''Manga/InuYasha'': Sesshoumaru feels that he's this. After finding out that his brother [[HalfHumanHybrid InuYasha]] inherited their father's [[InfinityPlusOneSword legendary offensive weapon]] that he had wanted while he was bequeathed the [[HealingShiv healing sword]] that he disdained, events conspire to lead him to the [[AlwaysSecondBest realisation]] that his [[PowerAtAPrice hard-earned]] extremely impressive [[CruelAndUnusualDeath offensive ability]] was only given to him so that he could master it for Inuyasha to take from him. This leads him to the conclusion that his father had been ''[[ParentalFavoritism grooming]] Inuyasha to kill him''. [[spoiler:Getting over his daddy issues and learning that his father actually wanted him to be a BigBrotherMentor is a major part of his CharacterDevelopment whereupon he settles for being the AloofBigBrother type.]]* Subverted with Lina in ''LightNovel/{{Slayers}}'', who felt this to her older sister, Luna, both a fighting prodigy and [[TheChosenOne the Knight of Ciefeed]] -- a special human born with a fragment of the world's [[{{God}} dragon god]] within them. While Lina felt that she didn't get enough credit for her magical powers (which naturally exceed beyond most humans) from her family, it wasn't the case, as her father was always supportive of her and Luna was the one who convinced Lina to [[WanderingTheEarth travel the world]] in the first place. A portion of this is WordOfGod from interviews.** While it's unknown how Amelia and Gracia[[spoiler:/Naga]] felt toward one another, Amelia feels this way towards her own friends, citing the fact that she's the weakest in the group (in terms of strategic thinking and physically; her magical powers are almost on par with Zelgadis') and more often than not doesn't try to object against the others' (''especially'' Lina, who pushes her around and uses her vast family fortune to pay for meals) wishes or thoughts. While her [[LargeHam sermons of misguided justice]] warrant reactions, the others are apathetic toward her otherwise.* Seileiz, eldest of the three heirs to his country in ''Manga/VampireGame'', is also by far his mother's most hated. [[spoiler:There are three reasons for this: he's adopted (as are his brothers), he's the SonOfAWhore, and he's the illegitimate son of the king. The queen was willing to put up with the first two, but having a reminder of her husband's refusal to sleep with her running around really pissed her off.]]* In ''Manga/{{Nononono}}'', Nono's brother, Yuuta, is like this. Both of them were trained by their ski-jumper dad to be ski-jumpers, hoping to go to the olympics. The problem is, Nono is the more talented of the two, but she can't go to the Olympics due to being a girl. Their father kept on pushing Yuuta to be as good as his sister.* Reina in ''Anime/QueensBlade'' apparently suffers from this early on, being clearly the weakest between the three Vance sisters and not being allowed to leave the palace or do anything with her life. The justification for this later on is that [[spoiler:Reina is the GenerationXerox of her mother, who died fighting in Queen's Blade, and her father was being overprotective for that reason.]]* Soul from ''Manga/SoulEater'' feels this way in comparison to his older brother, Wes. Since the flashbacks showing this have all either been influenced by the Book of Eibon or the Black Blood, we don't really know how much of this is true. Also, Tsubaki's older brother Masamune cites his perceived Unfavorite status as motivation for becoming a kishin.* ''Manga/SangatsuNoLion'' plays with this trope by offering two different perspectives: with and without a narrator. In the series' first chapter where it lacked a narrator, the flashbacks of the protagonist Rei are presented in a way that implies that he was the unfavorite in a family of three children when his successes in shogi are seemingly neglected in favor of caring for one of the other two children. However, later on, when Rei has long since been established as the narrator, the story goes into more detailed flashbacks that reveal the ''he'' was actually the favorite who was given more attention than the rest of the children.* In ''Anime/GirlsUndPanzer'', Miho is the less favored daughter of Shiho Nishizumi, compared to Shiho's older daughter and heir Maho. Shiho considers Miho a disgrace to the family who does not do tankery the Nishizumi way, berates her for saving her teammates from drowning in a river at the cost of a tournament win, and [[spoiler:plans on disowning her]] after hearing about her becoming captain of the Oarai tankery team. [[spoiler:After Miho wins the tournament against Maho, Shiho sighs and begins clapping while smiling, which could indicate a change of heart]].* ''Manga/DeathNote'': A minor example. While Soichiro Yagami is adamant that his younger child Sayu couldn't possibly be Kira, he isn't so certain about Light.* Alluka from ''HunterXHunter'' is not even considered as a family member of the Zoldyck because her ability is too difficult to control and could kill all of them. The only one who loves her is Killua.** Milluki is also very disliked for being a FatBastard, {{Otaku}}, and {{Hikikomori}}. However, he is treated much better than his younger sister Alluka.* In ''Manga/RosarioToVampire'', there are two of the four Shuzen daughters who are born by Gyokuro. Due to her hatred towards Akasha Bloodriver, she hates Akasha's daughter, Moka, as much as she hates Akasha. She doesn't care for her other stepdaughter, Akua, and she hates even her youngest blood-related daughter, Kokoa. So, Gyokuro's only favorite is Kahlua, her oldest blood-related daughter.** Subverted with Akasha's relationship with her daughters. While Moka is definitely her favorite daughter because it's her own, she also loves her three stepdaughters.** Among the four Shuzen sisters, Kokoa fits this trope the best. She is less talented and not as beautiful as her three older sisters. Her own mother hates her, and she has three {{Aloof Big Sister}}s, with only Moka being the one who respects her. Actually, Kahlua loves Kokoa, too, but Kokoa is so afraid of her that she does not notice that. ** Just how much does Gyokuro hate Kokoa? She went so far as to ''put a hit out on Kokoa's life'' and force Kahlua to carry said hit out.** According to Kahlua, [[spoiler:Gyokuro loves Kokoa, but this statement is not very believable, since Kahlua is rather too optimistic and Gyokuro never showed any kind of love towards Kokoa]].* In the 4th volume of "Happy Happy Clover", [[http://rupanana.fam.cx/images/upload/%2527%2527%255D%255D%2527%2527%2527.bmp Kale has a flashback to when he was alot younger.]] When his mother was pregnant and is expecting a few new rabbits to be born. Kale is worried about being a big brother, and he later thinks that he's not going to get enough attention from his parents once they are born. When Kale's baby brothers finally arrive, [[http://www.myanime.me/screenshots/114904-episode-11-screenshot-008.jpg he changes his mind after talking with Shallot about the newborn babies.]]* ''Manga/SandChronicles'''s Fuji resents how his parents treat his younger sister Shiika more favourably than him and rarely speak to him unless it's about studying and his duties as the future heir. This is why he's convinced he's the product of his mother's alleged affair, thinking she looks at him with shame. [[spoiler:Turns out Shiika's treated better because ''she's'' the illegitimate child and their mother feels guilty about it; she treats Shiika well to make up for the unpleasant circumstances of her birth and is colder towards Fuji because she's too scared to directly approach him about it.]]* In ''LightNovel/ChivalryOfAFailedKnight'', Ikki is considered the BlackSheep of his clan because of his Rank F Blazer ability and they subscribe to a rather twisted SocialDarwinist philosophy that considers Blazer ability to be the only strength that matters. Never mind that Ikki is a MasterSwordsman who can and has defeated higher ranked Blazers. When they aren't flat out ignoring his existence, they actively sabotage him to ensure he remains a failure.* ''Manga/OnePiece'': The third son of the Vinsmoke Family is viewed as the BlackSheep because he was apparently unsuited to be a fighter while his three quadruplet brothers were powerful and sociopathic enough to make great warriors. While Judge Vinsmoke loved and spoiled all of his strong children, he abused and neglected the weakest as a failure, eventually rejecting him outright. [[spoiler:Said weakest son is none other than Sanji]].[[/folder]]

[[folder:Comic Books]]* Comicbook/{{Loki}} sees himself as this, with a very "[[ComicBook/TheMightyThor Thor]] was always the favorite!" outlook on life. Even though he's a total douche most of the time, most of what he does is done in an effort to gain the respect and adoration of Asgard and his father.** In a case of tragic irony, Odin does actually love Loki (despite the thousand and one reasons not to). He's just near-completely [[CannotSpitItOut incapable of ever actually saying it]]. The one time he did, he immediately yelled at Loki and Thor afterward, and refused to speak on the matter.** Loki may also be a victim of BecauseDestinySaysSo in regards to his role in Ragnarok.** There is also the ''generational abuse'' thing going on with Odin himself growing up in the shadow of his father's (Bor's) favorite son ''Cul'' (who is a villain and almost destroyed the world at least twice). [[RoyallyScrewedUp The Asgardian royal family is impressively dysfunctional]].* In the ''Film/SpiderManTrilogy'', ''ComicBook/UltimateSpiderMan'', and ''WesternAnimation/TheSpectacularSpiderMan'' cartoon, Harry Osborn is a rare example of being The Unfavorite as an only child, with his father preferring fellow intellectual and friend Peter Parker to his own son. This is in contrast to the portrayal of Harry and Norman's relationship in the comics: originally, Norman was portrayed as a loving, but absentee father who tried to make up for his utter lack of time for his son, via spoiling him rotten. This in turn led to Harry becoming a drug addict, as he used his dad's money to avoid working, and spend his days partying and buying drugs from his neighborhood drug dealer. Of course years later, the relationship between Harry and his father was retconned into a "KickTheDog" scenario to make Norman (then dead and buried, with Marvel dead set on not resurrecting him) an evil person who physically and emotionally abused his son throughout his entire life. When his son died, this led to Norman seeking out a replacement heir, ultimately settling on Peter Parker largely due to editor Bob Harras's demand that Peter and Norman's rivalry be changed to be more like Professor X and Magneto's rivalry, complete with Norman wanting Peter to join with him the same way Magneto is forever harping on Xavier to join forces and conquer humanity.** There was another period of Peter being the favored one, with Johnny Storm as the UnFavorite. While they eventually got over it and became buddies, for a while, Johnny resented the fact that Peter seemed closer to his family than he was, due to Peter's shared scientific aptitude with Reed and ease at being friends with Sue.* The ComicBook/XMen have a lot of this going on:** ComicBook/EmmaFrost was The Unfavorite to her successful brother until he revealed he was gay. Then both kids were unfavorites.** Sam Guthrie's other siblings are all Unfavorites in comparison to him.** Charles Xavier and Cain Marko, stepbrothers, were both unfavorites to a degree.** Alex Summers was Unfavorite to Scott in the eyes of Nathaniel Essex.** James Proudstar was Unfavorite to his brother John, who died [[strike:heroically]] stupidly on his first mission as X-Man.** Deathbird is Unfavorite to her sister Lilandra, thanks to being avatistic throwback. Lil's brother D'Ken was also the Unfavorite, driving him to go nuts and steal the M'kraan Crystal.* Super Skrull's relationship with his two children is a textbook example of this trope. He favoured his son Sarnogg over his daughter Jazinda, even though Jazinda outshone her brother, mostly by the virtue of finding a way to be unkillable while he died in combat. He was even willing to allow Talisman to kill Jazinda in order to take her immortality for himself, until Shehulk reminded him he did still love his daughter and he saved her life, although he resumed his parental abandonment shortly afterwards.* The [[ComicBook/UltimateFantasticFour Ultimate]] (man, family relations ''suck'' in this universe) [[ComicBook/FantasticFour Reed Richards]], a bespectacled young genius, was never the ideal son his father wanted. It's shown in the ''first issue'' that his father showed more affection to Ben Grimm, the tough football star of the school, than to his own son. Fortunately, the situation isn't visited often in later issues; what with Reed finding a new father figure in Sue and Johnny's scientist father and being faced with matters more important than getting paternal approval, such as cosmic mutations and alien invasions every other week. [[spoiler:Except for when things finally get to such a boil for Reed Richards that he fakes his death by ''blowing up his family home, vaporizing his entire family in the process''.]]* On a planet where twins are the norm, Mekt Ranzz (Lightning Lord), older brother of twins Lightning Lad and Lightning Lass of the ''ComicBook/{{Legion Of Super-Heroes}}'', felt like he was ''everyone'''s unfavorite. Which is why he eventually became a supervillain who terrorized his younger siblings.** ''Felt'' is the key word, as it's never been revealed that his parents or his siblings treated him like garbage because he was a singular birth.* Vivisector in ''ComicBook/XStatix''. He's an only child, of course, but there's nobody in the world that Myles' father hates more than Myles himself. Why? Simple. His dad is a New England old money Ivy League college professor, and Myles is a gay mutant.* It wouldn't be too far off the mark to say that, in the Marvel universes (both 616 and Ultimate), every mutant born to mostly non-mutant families end up being unfavorites when their mutations manifest.** In the 616 timeline this actually would be quite an exaggeration. It seems to have been true of Bobby Drake (Iceman), but none of the other original five (Scott's parents were actually abducted by aliens before getting to see his and his brother's powers manifest), it was not true of Colossus, ComicBook/{{Storm}} (her parents were killed too early), Thunderbird I, Kitty Pryde, Rogue (she ran away from home before her powers manifested), Jubilee (her parents were dead before her powers manifested), and with reference to their human adoptive parents it was not true of ComicBook/{{Quicksilver}}, the ComicBook/ScarletWitch, Nightcrawler or Comicbook/{{Gambit}} (who was actually preferred to his adoptive father's biological son).* ComicBook/{{Huntress}} has at times been considered so, among the members of the Batfamily, due to her more violent nature and [[IWorkAlone unwillingness to work well with the others]], and especially Batman himself, with whom she has a conflicted relationship.-->'''Oracle''', speaking about Huntress: And what about the least favorite daughter?** Also in the Batfamily, Jason Todd is even more the unfavorite. Interestingly, he always ''considered'' himself the unfavorite, even before actually becoming it. Initially, Bruce merely expected him to be just like Dick, and this led to him thinking he was the Unfavorite. However, after coming back as the Red Hood, he is at best the unfavorite, and at worst not considered a part of the Batfamily at all.** Also, Stephanie Brown, who both Bruce and Barbara consider annoying, and who gets treated much more harshly for the same mistakes than the other members of the Bat-Family. The fandom tends to exaggerate this, but it's very much present.* Creator/ArtSpiegelman, the AuthorAvatar of the biographical graphic novel ''ComicBook/{{Maus}}'' felt he always had to compete with his dead older brother, Richieu, who had died as a result of the Holocaust.* ''ComicBook/{{Bone}}'' has this with one of the primary antagonists saying [[spoiler:"Mother always liked you best." before trying to strike her sister down.]]** This isn't the only time [[spoiler: Briar]] mentioned this. She explains that her family treated her like an old, useless nursemaid and made [[spoiler: her younger sister Rose the queen instead of her. The reason, according to her, is because nobody knew she was a Veni-Yan-Carni, a type of powering dreaming sorcerous born into the family line. It's possible she just neglected to tell them though, since Rose mentions she thought Briar's "dreaming eye" was blind.]]* In ''Comicbook/AdventuresInTheRifleBrigade'', Captain Hugo Darcy is a man among men and a true hero if ever there was one. He saved the entire world at the end of the first miniseries, and once called Erwin Rommel "a big nosed cunt" to his face. At the beginning of the second mini, he visits his family, and because his work in the Rifle Brigade is top secret, his drunken idiotic flyboy brother Robert gets all the glory and adulation.* Kalibak in Franchise/TheDCU is ComicBook/{{Darkseid}}'s Unfavorite. Even worse, his father's favorite, Orion, is the heroic ArchEnemy of the entire rest of his blood family and wants to kill them -- but Darkseid still respects him more because he is, at least, competent about it.** Grayven has it even worse. Darkseid at least sees Kalibak as useful and loyal DumbMuscle. Darkseid snubs Grayven at every possible opportunity since Grayven is nothing but Darkseid-lite. Grayven's EyeBeams are weaker than Darkseid's Omega Effect, Grayven isn't as strong as Darkseid, Grayven's a SmugSnake while Darkseid is a MagnificentBastard...the only thing Grayven has going for him is his hair. There is literally nothing Grayven can do that Darkseid can't do better. Grayven's also pretty open about his ambitions to overthrow Darkseid. He's incompetent ''and'' disloyal.* [[{{Marvel 2099}} Paul-Philip Ravage]] suffered from this quite a bit. Didn't help that his was a family of backstabbing businessmen, all of whom immediately began plotting his downfall when he started proposing ''actual'' solutions to pollution problems. [[spoiler: And by the time he was winning his father's respect, he began losing his human form...]]* Jimmy in the ComicBook/{{Chick tract|s}} "Unloved," as his parents refuse to attend his high school graduation, constantly tell him he's inferior to his sister, criticize his choice of a wife for having kids (and she later leaves him with all his money) and disown him after he asks to borrow money. Strangely enough, while his sister always does better in their eyes, [[FridgeLogic they don't even bother to attend her wedding]].** Generally, any character in a Chick Tract who converts tends to become the Unfavorite of the ''world at large''.* Carol Danvers, AKA: ComicBook/MsMarvel, now Captain Marvel, was never close to her father due to his decidedly outdated chauvinism. The breaking point came when he refused to spend the money necessary to send Carol to college, instead sending one of her brothers, despite the fact that Carol was smarter than her brothers and had better grades, simply because her father didn't believe that women should go out and get themselves proper educations and jobs. He even point blankly told Carol that as a woman she didn't deserve a full education and career and that she could never hold her own in the real world, and that the best thing for her was to meet a NiceGuy who would marry her and take care of her and then she should StayInTheKitchen and have kids. The fiercely independent Carol rejected her father's sexist beliefs since she wanted more out of life than being someone's stay at home wife and mom and joined the military, specifically the US Air Force and became an accomplished fighter pilot reaching the rank of Major while also dabbling in spy work and of course later becoming a superhero. Carol's father never really accepted what she did with her life, even though her accomplishments included saving the entire world, and it led to an estrangement between the two that was never reconciled. [[/folder]]

[[folder:Fairy Tales]]* Many a ''Grimms' Fairy Tales'' [[NaiveEverygirl heroine]] with a WickedStepmother and step-sister. Men sure had rotten taste in women back then.** Fairy tales "Diamonds and Toads" and "[[http://www.mythfolklore.net/andrewlang/239.htm Tritill, Litill, and the Birds]]" take it even further by having [[AbusiveParents biological parents]] doing this to one of their children (usually the youngest).* There are a number of tales where the youngest daughter of a king becomes the unfavorite of her father when she does something that displeases him (compares her love of him to salt in bread, refuses to acknowledge that he is more fortunate and rich than God, etc). This inevitably results in him banishing her, her setting off to seek her fortune, and eventually meeting her father again, after he has to eat his words and forgive her.** Even though it's a Shakespearean drama, Theatre/KingLear is a tragic [[SubvertedTrope subversion]] of the above example when Cordelia is banished and disinherited by her father. She still manages to find a physican to treat Lear's illness and be reconciled with him before their deaths.* In certain fairy tales, a king and queen have many sons, all of whom become unfavorites in favor of a soon-to-be-born daughter to the point of them being planned to be ''killed''. They escape, and eventually are joined by their innocent sister. [[/folder]]

[[folder:FanWorks]]* ''Fanfic/AdviceAndTrust'': Shinji to Gendo. After finding out that his father raised Rei after abandoning him Shinji got furious, wondering why he was not good enough and why his father dumped him and then took another child in.* In ''Fanfic/GhostsOfEvangelion'' Asuka was this to Misato. Since she worked hard to earn other people's praise and she had low self-esteem, she resented it.-->'''Misato:''' Whaaaat? Can't I buy lunch for my favorite girl?\\'''Asuka:''' (growling) You're buying me swordfish, and we both know I'm not your favorite. Spill it already.* In some ''Franchise/HarryPotter'' fics, Harry is treated like this when it is mistakenly prophesied that his little/older sibling is the Chosen One and everyone either downright hates him or ignores him.* This is the entire premise of some ''Manga/{{Naruto}}'' fanfiction. Often, Naruto's OC sibling is substituted for the jinchuriki, and Naruto's parent-inclusive life becomes inexplicably ''worse''. One such example is [[http://www.fanfiction.net/s/6077073/1/The_Heros_Brother this]].** Some fanfics such as Fanfic/Team8 take this UpToEleven with regards to Hinata.* ''Film/StarTrek'' has some interesting cases with Jim being the unfavorite compared to ''his dead father''. His mother couldn't stand the resemblance between them and would often do nothing to stop his stepfather from beating him, neglecting him and traveling far away just so she wouldn't have to look at Jim.** In one story, after becoming captain, to get back at his mother from neglecting and allowing the abuse to happen, Jim donated a huge sum of money towards charities where children had been abused, naming it her, "for all the things she did when he was a kid". Afterwards, people went up to her, asking her "how does it feel?" for raising such a nice kid and how ''proud'' she must be.** For the record, there is little to no evidence for this in canon.* There is a very good ''Franchise/SailorMoon'' fanfiction called [[http://www.fanfiction.net/s/2138430/1/Misconception Misconception]], in which time changes and another child (Chibi-Naru) is born in Chibiusa's place. Despite being (technically) an only child, the poor girl can never live up to her "sister's" memory. She spends ''over nine hundred years'' either ignored (with her parents desperately trying to conceive the daughter they really wanted) or treated as a terribly inferior replacement for Chibiusa, to the point that the senshi often forget that she isn't Chibiusa herself. When you find out that your (favorite) aunt is trying to undo time itself so that you're never even born just to bring back some other kid (and everyone else you know is completely on board with the plan, ''including your own parents'') you know you've got problems. Luckily, there's a happy ending. [[spoiler: When Chibi-Naru accidentally inherits Sailor Moon's powers, everyone forgets Chibiusa ever existed. The only ones that do remember her are Pluto, who exists outside time, and Chibi-Naru herself, since she only knew of Chibiusa through stories.]]** [[https://www.fanfiction.net/s/2873660/1/Misperception A sequel]] written by another author expands on this, on how even though the relationship between Chibi-Naru and her parents is much better, she still holds some bitter memories of when they neglected her, and on how she meets various other children of Serenity and/or Endymion from different dimensions, including Chibiusa...[[spoiler: and finds out in one dimension ''she'' was the beloved child that never existed and her ''brother'' was the Unfavorite that suffered neglect to the point that they denied him even his last name, not helped by the fact that he can't inherit the Silver Crystal.]]* In [[FanFic/EquestriaAHistoryRevealed Equestria: A History Revealed]], Princess Luna was incredibly unpopular with the populace due to her shy and aloof nature, along with the fact that her sister's cult of personality was currently at an all-time high. This all comes to a head at the [[spoiler: Luna Trials, in which the populace hates Luna even more, and Luna thinks she had lost the love of her sister, paving the road to the Civil War, and her fall to become Nightmare Moon.]]* The ''WesternAnimation/MyLittlePonyFriendshipIsMagic'' fanfiction, ''FanFic/RacerAndTheGeek'', features a particularly [[http://www.fimfiction.net/story/81159/1/racer-and-the-geek/predawn tear-jerking example]] of this trope in its never chapters.* Fanfiction often has [[Film/{{Transformers}} Megatron jealous of his brother Optimus.]] Whether they are actually biological brothers or simply brothers by name depends on the author. For example, [[http://www.fanfiction.net/s/3853153/1/The_Ties_That_Bind_Us The Ties That Bind Us]] shows a young Optimus being injured by an ambush and his caretaker Ironhide had to carry him while telling Megatron to follow him. While understanding that Optimus was more serious condition, Megatron began to grow envious that he was always placed second place after Optimus.* You know how down below April is called the unfavorite in ''ComicStrip/ForBetterOrForWorse''? It's taken UpToEleven in ''FanFic/TheNewRetcons'', in which Elly goes insane and denies that April was ever her daughter, throwing her out of the house. It didn't help that John eventually gave up on convincing Elly April was their daughter, forcing her to spend her final years in Millborough with her brother's family before she leaves for college. Also, only Michael and her uncle Phil attended her graduation. While Liz had a good reason for missing it cause she was dealing with her own family crisis, and Grandpa Jim couldn't go because he was on his death bed, that doesn't really excuse her still nuts mother or her father.** Not one you'd think about unless you read the comments for the fics and entered WordOfGod territory, but [[spoiler: Lawrence is this to Connie. See, she had had a TeenPregnancy and was able to give the baby to relatives. When she got pregnant with Lawrence, and it failed to keep Paolo with her, she banked on being able to leave this baby with her relatives too, but they refused because Lawrence was mixed race. So Connie was stuck with him and resented him for it. That he later admitted to being gay just made it worse.]]* Although never specified in canon, Disney/TheLionKing fans will often make Scar this in his family to provide a FreudianExcuse.* Webcomic/AxisPowersHetalia Fanon has plenty of fanfic about Sealand's abandonment by England.* Empath of ''Fanfic/EmpathTheLuckiestSmurf'' believes this of himself since he sees Papa Smurf focus most of his efforts on raising a hundred of Empath's fellow Smurfs instead of getting his [[spoiler:only biological]] son out of Psychelia. Interestingly, most of Empath's fellow Smurfs feel that of themselves whenever Empath comes home for a visit, particularly Hefty.** Grouchy in "Days Of Auld Lang Smurf" also believes this of himself when he sees that his "resurrected" Papa Smurf focuses most of his attention on Handy, Hefty, and Sassette than he does on him.* In ''FanFic/DespairsLastResort'', Kaito reveals he is this [[spoiler: before his execution]]. This also serves as part of the reason why [[spoiler: he kills Chiyo. His work as an animator is the only way he believes his parents will see him as something.]]* In the fanfic ''Code: Lyoko Second Generation Relapse'', there's a mild case with the 3 eldest Della Robbia children with Odd preferring the older girl Jace with having a personality more like his and Sissi preferring the younger Lizzie for the same reason. This isn't shown to affect their older brother Aaron ([[OutnumberedSibling who just REALLY wishes he wasn't the only boy in the family]]) or the much younger twins who are the babies of the family. It's eventually revealed that the reason Sissi isn't close to Jace is because [[spoiler: Jace is the result of an affair that Odd had with his ex-girlfriend Sam in the aftermath of a fight he and Sissi had around the time Aaron was conceived. She prefers Lizzie for being her blood daughter.]] It is unknown if Lizzie is aware of this.* In ''FanFic/SonicXDarkChaos'', it's revealed that [[spoiler: Shadow and Eric]] are this to [[spoiler: Maledict]]; the former because he was [[VideoGame/SonicAdventure2 "corrupted by human frailty"]], the latter because a [[NoodleIncident serious accident]] during his birth turned him into... [[HumanoidAbomination something else]]. He only regards [[spoiler: Sonic]] as his true successor.* [[Anime/{{Pokemon}} Misty]] has this compared to her sisters in ''[[https://www.fanfiction.net/s/9939848/6/Pokemon-Reset-Bloodlines Pokemon Rest Bloodlines]]'' to such an extent, it's outright stated her parents only kept her around due to the negative publicity they'd get for abandoning or ''killing'' her.* In ''Fanfic/ChildrenOfAnElderGod'', Rei is Gendo's favorite pilot. In chapter 19, Asuka went mad with Gendo because he always favored Rei, not matter what.[[/folder]]

[[folder:Film - Animation]]* ''Disney/TheLionKing'':** Nuka from ''Disney/TheLionKingIISimbasPride''. The scrawny, barely a mane growing lion voiced by Andy Dick. Little cub Kovu gets picked over him to take on Scar's heritage [[note]]Kovu not even having been sired by Scar, though it's implied Nuka is, being the son of Zira, who was apparently one of Scar's mates.[[/note]] and gets treated unfairly by the lionesses. This makes [[spoiler: his death even more tragic, when he chases Simba up a dam, proclaiming he's doing it for his mother, and that this'd be his moment of glory, with a mad driven look in his eyes. Just before the footing gives away from underneath him, and he ends up crushed by a bunch of logs. His mother for the first time in the movie shows she actually ''does'' care and frantically tries to dig him out. He ends with a whimper. "Sorry... I tried..."]] A deleted storyboard set continues with Nuka saying [[spoiler: "I got your attention now . . . " and then expiring.]]** It's implied that Scar was this to Mufasa growing up. Considering that his original name "Taka" means "trash" in Swahili, and his brother's name means "king", it's not hard to tell who was their favourite.* ''Disney/TheLittleMermaidIIReturnToTheSea'' has Ursula's sister Morgana, who at one point yells "It was always 'Ursula this' and 'Ursula that' and 'Why can't you be more like your sister URSULA?'!" And when she [[spoiler:achieves virtually complete control over the oceans]], she howls at the skies, "[[LargeHam WHO'S YOUR FAVORITE NOW, MA?!]]" Freud would have a field day.* ''WesternAnimation/{{Igor}}'' serves this to his mentor Dr. Glickenstein. Did we mention [[EvilMentor he bullies Igor for no good reason?]]* ''Disney/{{Cinderella}}'' is a very early example as the original story dates back hundreds of years. And Cinderella more or less is the poster child for this. As her stepmother treats her like shit and uses her as her personal slave, while her two daughters are spoiled brats who get everything they want.[[/folder]]

[[folder:Film - Live Action]]* ''Film/DoingTimeOnMapleDrive'': Tim Carter (Creator/JimCarrey in an early dramatic role!) is this due to his failure to work out at military school, and has taken to drinking as a result of his parents' callousness.* The mother in ''[[Film/{{Crossroads 2002}} Crossroads]]'' quite blatantly tells her high school graduate daughter who she abandoned years ago that she was a mistake and that she never wanted to have her. She is remarried and has two sons.* In ''Film/DeadPoetsSociety'', Todd is strongly implied to be The Unfavorite.* In ''Film/EverAfter'', Danielle gets the short end of the stick because she was the biological daughter of her deceased father. And before his death, it probably didn't help that he said "I love you" to Danielle and didn't say it to the stepmother, only increasing her jealousy of Danielle. Interestingly, the same thing happens to the youngest daughter who isn't as beautiful as her elder sister and isn't as cruel and snobbish, being more down-to-earth and kinder.** Jacqueline's treatment as the unfavorite of the stepsisters is lampshaded by her, when she predicts that she'd be the one treated as a servant, if Danielle weren't around. When Danielle falls ill and can't wait on her family, the stepmother sure enough orders Jacqueline to do their chores. Jacqueline is not pleased.* ''Film/TheGoonies''. Played for laughs in how Mama favors Francis over Jake.-->'''Jake''': You always take his side, Mama. You always liked him better than me.-->'''Mama''': (''Smacks Jake'') That's right!** Still Jake is not the real Unfavorite, as he's not chained in the basement like Sloth.* Kevin [=McCallister=] in ''Film/HomeAlone'' seems to be this, as most of his relatives either ignore him, bully him, or regularly accuse him of being a troublemaker.** In the sequel this is shown to be compounded by Buzz being a ManipulativeBastard as well as a bully.* ''Bollywood/KabhiKushiKabhieGham'' actually manages to play this trope compassionately ''without'' villifying the parents for it. This is arguably attributable to the fact that the Unfavorite in this case is mostly so by default, rather than actually being unloved or undervalued.* Albert in ''TheKingsSpeech'' was this as a child, due to his stuttering. But this becomes subverted as when they became older, his older brother preferred a more carefree frivolous lifestyle while Albert was TheDutifulSon. His father George does approve of the adult Albert (though still frustrated by his speech impediment) and his last words were that Albert would be a better king than his brother, even though he didn't say it to Albert directly.* ''Film/TheLordOfTheRings'' '''movies''', especially the 3rd, hit this trope pretty hard for Faramir. It's text, not subtext, in his father's dialog. While Faramir ''is'' a grown character and, logically, "should've gotten over it by now", his father's scathing treatment of him makes it almost impossible for anyone ''not'' to sympathize. This factor, combined with some deleted scenes present in the extended versions, helps explain why [[spoiler: Faramir initially decided to capture Frodo and the Ring, which is the opposite way he chose in the book]]. It's also notable that the favorite, Boromir, actually admires and defends Faramir, and is fed up with their father just as much as Faramir.* In ''Film/MysticPizza'', while Kat is looked on favorably because she's smart enough to go to Yale, and industrious enough that she's working several jobs in order to pay for it, her sister Daisy is seen as the screw-up and as a slut. [[LampshadeHanging Lampshaded]] by Daisy.-->''Kat's such a good girl. Where did we go wrong with Daisy?''* Much of the plot of ''Film/OrdinaryPeople'' revolves around Conrad (Timothy Hutton) being disfavored by his mother Beth (Mary Tyler Moore), who preferred his older brother, Buck. * Tonny from ''Film/{{Pusher}} 2'' is this compared to his father's other son and his kid half-brother.* Gordie in ''Film/StandByMe'', whose parents never forgave him for being the one to survive.* In the new ''Film/{{Thor}}'' movie, Loki's StartOfDarkness is a result of his jealousy over the fact that his father, Odin, has always favored his brother Thor. [[spoiler: It turns out that Odin chose Thor to succeed the throne of Asgard because Loki is adopted, and isn't Asgardian. Loki could never have ruled no matter what Odin's preference was. Odin's actual feelings towards Loki are left ambiguous -- it could be that he genuinely loves Loki as a son, or it could be that he only took the boy in to use as a political pawn.]]** Despite that Loki still loves Frigga--who didn't feel sad when they saw Loki hug Frigga after [[spoiler: he kills his father, King Laufey.]]* In ''Film/TowerOfTerror'', Abigail feels this way toward her sister [[spoiler: Sally]], since everyone was going to something for her on Abigail's birthday. [[spoiler: That thing was going to be Abigail's suprise birthday party]].* As the movie ''Film/WalkTheLine'' showed, Johnny never could quite match up to his dutiful dead brother in his dad's eyes.** Spoofed in ''Film/WalkHardTheDeweyCoxStory'', where Dewey Cox's father shouts "The wrong kid died!" even in completely inapplicable situations.* ''Film/WelcomeToTheDollhouse'' has Dawn. Punished constantly by her parents, especially when younger sister Missy (the apple of their eye) constantly baits her. * In ''{{Willard}}'', despite being the strongest of the rats, Ben can never get the same level of affection as Socrates. [[spoiler: after he [[LoveMakesYouEvil decides to stop taking it]] Willard directly states "I hate you."]]* Multi-generational one in ''Film/TheWolverine''. Shingen claims Ichiro never considered him a worthy son, instead favoring his granddaughter, Shingen's daughter Mariko. Whether he is telling the truth or not, however, is left up to the viewer. [[spoiler:Given subsequent revelations about his father, he might also have simply been mistaken; Viper implies that Ichiro chose Mariko as his successor because she'd be easier to manipulate than Shingen.]]* In ''Film/RomeoMustDie'', who's the unfavorite is very unclear. [[spoiler:Po is the one who ended up going to America with their father Ch'u, while Han went to ''prison'' in order to help him escape. However, Ch'u has Po ''killed'' when he was about to compromise a major business deal. It's implied that Ch'u has always preferred Han, in spite of the fact that Han rejected him by becoming a police officer, and largely only cares for his brother.]]* In ''Film/ThePatsy'', Pat is filled with unrequited love for her sister Grace's boyfriend Tony. Tony has no idea, and Grace for her part is also attracted to another man.* Preston from ''Film/BlankCheck'' is this to his father, who favors his older brothers for going into business for themselves.[[/folder]]

[[folder:Literature]]* Creator/JaneAusten:** In ''Literature/PrideAndPrejudice'', Elizabeth is her father's favorite, and her mother's least favorite. Lydia is her mother's favorite, and her father's least favorite. This is nice indicator of what each parent values. Jane is adored by both of her parents, Mary is almost universally ignored, but the second-youngest Bennet daughter Kitty is perpetually told to shut up and stop getting in everyone's way.** Similarly in ''Literature/{{Persuasion}}'', plain, sensible and sensitive Anne is ignored and dismissed by her family while her beautiful but vain sister Elisabeth is admired by all.** Similarly in ''Literature/MansfieldPark'', Fanny's mother only cares about her sons and babies her youngest daughter, but ignores her older two daughters. Fanny only realises this when returning for a much anticipated visit after years away from home.** In ''Literature/SenseAndSensibility'', Mrs. Ferrars dotes on her daughter Fanny and younger son Robert, but doesn't seem to particularly like elder son Edward.* Cosette in ''Literature/LesMiserables'' is a truly extreme TearJerker example, who, after being put in the care of the Thenardier family (with her mother paying them all she can), is despised, terribly abused and forced to be the inn's servant at the age of five. In contrast, the real daughters of the Thenardier family are treated like little princesses. ** Gavroche, the other child of the Thenardier family fits this trope too, as his mother only loved her daughters and his father didn't pay any attention to any of his children. He's so neglected that, as a baby, he's left to cry on and on with nobody paying any attention to him. He's later abandoned and lives on the streets. While on the street he takes two younger boys who are actually his brothers that his mother gave away as infants and were (accidentally) abandoned by their adoptive mother under his wing.* In [[Literature/TheRavenCycle The Dream Thieves]], toward the end of the book Ronan Lynch reflects on the fact that, of the three Lynch brothers, he was their father's favorite and youngest brother Matthew was their mother's favorite, leaving oldest brother Declan to be no one's favorite.* In the ''Literature/VorkosiganSaga'', Aral Vorkosigan got a bit of this from his father. His older brother had been one of the first casualties of Mad Emperor Yuri's Civil War, and his father sometimes acted as if the wrong brother had died.* Thomas Raith in JimButcher's ''Literature/TheDresdenFiles''. In ''Blood Rites'', it is revealed that he is Lord Raith's only surviving son, because Raith always kills his sons when they are old enough to become a threat (although he keeps his daughters around him). Thomas is still alive only because he was clever enough to avoid his father's earlier indirect attempts to get him killed.** It's unclear how clever he is; while Thomas is [[ObfuscatingStupidity smarter than he looks]], we've rarely if ever seen him accomplish anything that's really extraordinary for his kind. However, Thomas is the ''youngest'' son, so that might be why he survived as long as he did. [[spoiler: It's also strongly hinted that the death curse of his mother weakened Lord Raith to the point where he could no longer kill Thomas in his [[OutWithABang preferred method]].]]* Creator/RoaldDahl's ''Literature/{{Matilda}}'' has parents that are completely unappreciative of her superlative brilliance. Her father cares far more about son Mikey, a total nonentity, and the mother is more interested in bingo.* Ebenezer Scrooge, of Creator/CharlesDickens's ''Literature/AChristmasCarol'' fame is heavily implied to be this, sent away to BoardingSchool for years at a time by his resentful father. In some versions (at least in TheFilmOfTheBook with Alistair Sim), it's explained that Ebenezer's father blames him for his mother's DeathByChildbirth. His kind-hearted and beautiful [[FridgeLogic younger]] sister Fan is kept at home and is the apparent favorite, possibly due to an implied resemblance to her mother.* In Creator/TeresaEdgerton's ''[[Literature/{{Celydonn}} Green Lion Trilogy]]'', Ceilyn. His parents were KissingCousins in a notoriously strait-laced segment of society, and felt that their marriage was all right only if it were platonic, so they were ashamed to have had him. Sometime after Ceilyn's birth, his father had a vision and felt that he and his wife had been absolved and blessed, so Ceilyn's younger siblings are beloved but he is seen as a reminder of shameful behaviour.* In ''Literature/GoneWithTheWind'', Scarlett's daughter Ella is her least favorite child; when Scarlett's other daughter Bonnie dies, Scarlett wonders why Ella couldn't have died instead.* Taken to new and extreme heights of Southern Gothic in Gillian Flynn's debut novel, ''Sharp Objects''; the narrator, Camille, is her AxCrazy mother's Unfavorite, which is how she managed to ''survive'' to adulthood as [[spoiler:nothing more than a self-harming, self-destructive alcoholic]]. Her more tractable younger sister [[spoiler:died in childhood as the end result of their mother's Munchausen's by proxy]], and her ''much'' younger half-sister is [[spoiler:a sex-and-death-obsessed psychopath]] after thirteen years of the same treatment. Fun book.* Creator/TomHolt has a tendency to do this.** The most obvious example is the protagonist Malcolm in ''Literature/ExpectingSomeoneTaller''. Like most of Holt's male leads, Malcolm is a total wimp, and his parents unabashedly compare him to his super-perfect sister Bridget. Becoming the heir to practically unlimited power makes Malcolm immediately think that it was originally meant for Bridget. [[spoiler:In fact, Malcolm's lack of self-esteem and desire to do good make him the perfect person to inherit said power; Bridget would totally mess it up.]]** Another example is Kevin Christ in ''Only Human'', who's the younger brother to Jesus and the second son of God.* In Sharon Lee's and Steve Miller's Literature/LiadenUniverse series:** In ''Scout's Progress'', Aelianna Caylon, despite being acknowledged as the foremost mathematical mind on Liad and the indirect saviour of many starship pilots, is The Unfavorite of her mother's children, and has been a target of her [[DomesticAbuse brother's abuse]] ever since they were children, when they overheard a conversation in which Aelianna was recommended to their mother over her brother as the best candidate for being her heir. Her brother was chosen instead, but has abused the position by taking out his resentment on Aelianna ever since; their mother [[ParentalObliviousness refuses to recognize the situation]].** One of the reasons Kareen yos'Phelium turned out so unpleasant was that she was the unfavorite, even though she was her mother's eldest child and would have been the clear heir except that she turned out to lack aptitude for the family business. Passing her over as head of the family would have been one thing by itself, but it's suggested that her mother pretty much regarded her as a waste of space and ignored all the useful aptitudes she ''did'' have.* In Creator/CSLewis's ''Literature/TillWeHaveFaces'', the king abused all three of his daughters impartially -- until [[HumanSacrifice the youngest had to be sacrificed to the gods]]. Then he was explicitly abusive because he had lost her, being stuck with two unappealing daughters. Also, both Orual and her tutor the Fox heap praise on Istra while ignoring Orual's other younger sister, Redival -- though, to be just, she was a very poor student and sly and treacherous.* George RR Martin's ''Literature/ASongOfIceAndFire'':** Tyrion Lannister's mother died giving birth and he is a dwarf. No, not the [[OurDwarvesAreAllTheSame fantasy kind]]. His father Tywin hates him. Interesting, however, in that the favorite, Jaime, is actually the only one in the family who truly loves Tyrion and will ever take his side.** Tyrion's uncles, Kevan, Tygett and Gerion, all loved him during his childhood and, in the present story, Kevan and his aunt Genna respect him. Tywin's distain just eclipses all this.** Jon Snow is treated this way by Catelyn Stark. Although he is actually Ned Stark's bastard son, Ned treats him like all of his children. Catelyn, on the other hand, treats him coldly and one point, deranged by grief and worry, wishes to his face that a near-fatal accident had happened to him rather than to one of her own children.** Also, Samwell Tarly to his father Lord Randyll, who sent him to The Wall because if he didn't he would have arranged a hunting accident on him.** Additionally, Theon Greyjoy whose father,Balon Greyjoy, only holds disdain for his son in how he has spent the last ten years a hostage to Balon's hated enemies the Starks. Ignoring that the only reason his son was a hostage was because he gave his son away as punishment for his own crimes of rebelling against King Robert.* Creator/TamoraPierce's ''Literature/CircleOfMagic'' series had Tris. She was disowned and disposed of by her parents, who sent her to live with various relatives who used her as a live-in servant while constantly berating and bullying her. Particularly strange was that she seems to have been an only child -- it was when she was moved away from her own parents that she encountered a "sibling rivalry" situation (her cousins, who got [[ParentalFavoritism preferential treatment]] from their parents -- Tris' aunts and uncles).** It's noted that at least part of the reason why this happened is that Tris's powers - which cover control over pretty much all weather - were unknown and uncontrolled at the time...which meant that they tended to synchronize with her emotions. They thought she was possessed, and it terrified them - but Tris does still think they could have handled it better. Also notable is that no one in her family is ever mentioned to have tried to make contact with Tris after she becomes known as one of the youngest and most powerful mages of her generation. (At one point in the second series, she tells her student that her family would probably like to have her back for her powers, but that'd be the only reason. She doesn't say whether or not her family attempted a reconciliation between books, though.)** There's also Daja, whose whole ''culture'' banished her, after she was the only survivor of a shipwreck that killed the rest of her family, due to the association of a lone survivor being bad luck. She understands the reasons behind it, but it still [[BerserkButton upsets]] her until they bring her back in.* In ''The First Wives Club,'' Aaron clearly favors successful doctor son Alex to his other one, Chris, kicking off an epic TheReasonYouSuckSpeech late in the book as Chris makes it clear that his brother "is perfect, the poor bastard, perfectly miserable" having to live up to his father's constant praise and favoritism ("Did you know when I started at the agency, people were surprised to learn you had ''two'' sons?"). ** When Aaron snaps that as soon as he leaves the firm and "my name is off the door," Chris will be fired, his son sadly points out that as long as he's there, ''their'' name will always be on the door. * This comes up in Pierce's ''Literature/TortallUniverse'' too.** Dovasary Balitang from ''Literature/DaughterOfTheLioness'' isn't the Unfavorite to her parents, but the leaders of the hidden raka rebellion don't even notice her except as Sarai's quiet younger sister, until Sarai starts getting unruly and they wish she was more like Dove. Still, it doesn't make them consider putting Dove on the throne instead of Sarai. [[spoiler:Not until Sarai actually ''elopes'' to get away from the increasingly oppressive rule of the Rittevons and Dove convinces them that it's not the disaster they assume it is.]]** Another Tortallan unfavorite is Beka Cooper from the ''Literature/ProvostsDog'' books. Her father's side of the family don't like to see her much because she's a Dog[[note]]policewoman[[/note]]. She and her siblings joined Lord Gershom's household, and his wife Teodorie dislikes Beka enough to forbid Beka's siblings from seeing her--Lady Teodorie loves her husband but hates his job and blames Beka for making him like it, as well as resentment that Beka isn't willing to study a ladylike trade the way her sisters do.* Josephine in Creator/TimPowers' ''Literature/TheStressOfHerRegard''. She is the disturbed and unappreciated younger sister of protagonist Michael Crawford's wife Julia; their mother [[DeathByChildbirth died giving birth]] to Josephine; the family says that they don't hold this against her but that Josephine holds it against herself. Josephine spent her youth coping with stress by becoming someone else; imitating a clockwork machine, or imitating her sister Julia (who charmingly made sure that people knew about this). Years after Julia's death, Crawford and Josephine are guests in someone else's home when Josephine slips into 'becoming' Julia for several days. Crawford then feels that he now knows Julia far better than he did when they were married - and doesn't like her much, and tries to help Josephine return to her own personality.* In Creator/JKRowling's ''Literature/HarryPotter'' series:** Harry is constantly compared unfavorably to his cousin Dudley by his aunt and uncle; his cousin is extremely spoiled whereas he is abused and coldly neglected. This becomes one of the ways the book shows Harry growing up, as "not being liked by parental figures" [[AgeAppropriateAngst becomes less important]] than "war between good and evil".** Ron feels like this, though it's not true (his family never shows him anything but the utmost unconditional love). Specifically he feels overshadowed by his five older brothers, '''and''' his younger sister because his mum supposedly wanted a daughter most of all, '''and''' his famous best friend, who his mum treats like another son. ** Molly has shown some unfavorite sentiments toward Fred and George. More than once she's compared the three of them unfavorably to their three older brothers. When Ron is appointed a school prefect (like Bill, Charlie, and Percy), Molly squeals, "That's everyone in the family!" prompting George to quip, "What are Fred and I? Next door neighbors?" She also apparently didn't have much faith in Ginny becoming a prefect either. Granted, Fred and George can be a handful, but even so...** It's implied that Tom Riddle was one of these in his youth: the woman running the orphanage was glad to see the back of him. It's justified in that it's also implied that he was a Damien-esque nightmare even as a child.** Voldemort's mother, [[ShrinkingViolet Merope]], to such an extent that it stunted the growth of her magical abilities.** Sirius Black is another example. His younger brother Regulus was 'the good son'. However, it's debatable whether or not Sirius took the 'unfavorite' role on himself by deliberately doing things he knew his family disapproved of, implying that he did not actually care whether or not his parents preferred him or his brother because he so deeply disapproved of their expectations and political views.** Aunt Petunia implies that she herself held this position in the Evans family, especially after Lily's magical abilities are discovered. Though it's difficult to know just how much of this perception was due to her jealousy over Lily's powers, as we only ever hear her side of the story. Lily's more attention drawing personality and beauty next to plain, boring, older, more responsible sister Petunia might have played a role as well, as well as being magical, which caused Petunia to equate boring and normal with being better as a defense mechanism. However, when [[spoiler:we do see them as young children, they seem to get along reasonably well, there's even subtle evidence to suggest that Lily idealized her older sister by taking Petunia's side in every conflict, even when Petunia was wrong to insult Severus Snape.]] In addition, Petunia never even says explicitly that the Evans parents treated Petunia differently or as second-best, only that she was upset that they loved Lily and didn't perceive Lily as a freak the way Petunia did, which upset Petunia to no end.** Severus Snape was revealed to have grown up with parents too busy fighting with each other to give a rip about him. Which is sad, considering he was an only child.** In case there weren't enough examples already (did Rowling have issues with this?), the Dumbledore family had this in spades. Ariana, the youngest member of the family, was mentally ill and required constant care and supervision to the partial exlusion of her older brothers out of necessity. Because of this, Aberforth seemed to wind up the unfavorite of the family, being neither ill like Ariana or a prodigal genius like Albus, and remains rather bitter toward his brother even when they're both old men (although for different reasons). Strangely, Albus himself seemed to feel like the Unfavorite as a boy, since he didn't think his mother gave him the proper attention he deserved due to his brilliance, and resented having to waste his time taking care of Ariana when he had many other ripe possibilities before him. As an old man, he admitted that it was all ego and he needed to get over himself.* ''Literature/TheEarthMyButtAndOtherBigRoundThings'' is a great insight of being The Unfavorite. The narrator is a chubby, blonde high-schooler with average grades living in a glamorous upper-class family of beautiful slim dark-haired people.* In Creator/JRRTolkien's ''[[Literature/LordOfTheRings Return of The King]]'', Denethor clearly ladles all the work on Faramir's shoulders partly because Boromir was his favorite. It is heavily implied that at least part of this is the immediate reaction of grief; Gandalf warns Faramir against doing anything rash, because his father loves him and will remember that.** Denethor himself was the Unfavorite to Thorongil/Aragorn's Favorite.---> "Indeed [Denethor] was as like to [Aragorn] as to one of nearest kin, and yet was ever placed second to the stranger in the hearts of men and the esteem of his father." ''The Return of the King'', Appendix A, J.R.R Tolkien.* Fingolfin, from Creator/JRRTolkien's ''Literature/TheSilmarillion''. After his half-brother Fëanor threatens to kill him then is exiled, their father Finwë chooses to accompany him into exile, relinquishing his crown, even though the text gives the reader no reason to think that Fëanor's attack on his brother was justified.* ''Literature/FlowersForAlgernon'' has a rather extreme version of this. Charlie's mother Rose preferred her daughter Norma to her son Charlie due to Norma having an average IQ compared to Charlie's very low 68. This made Norma a SpoiledBrat and left Charlie mostly confused and afraid of his mother who would beat him for perfectly natural things like having an erection as would any pubescent teen boy. Terrified he would do something to Norma, Rose eventually forced Charlie's father to have him taken away by [[spoiler:threatening to kill Charlie if he didn't]].** It's actually a subversion. As his memories come back, Charlie realizes that his sister was expected to achieve everything for both of them, which put her under unfair pressure to do well and caused her to bully him.* ''Literature/JacobHaveILoved'' takes this to biblical proportions, as implied by the title. The protagonist is overshadowed by her twin sister from birth, first because of the latter's frail health, then because of her beauty and musical talent. The title comes in when she parallels herself to Esau, Jacob's older, less fortunate brother, and decides she must be ''God's'' [=UnFavorite=].* Subverted in ''Literature/{{Dragonlance}}'' because Raistlin Majere appears to be The Unfavorite of the universe while his twin brother Caramon is well-liked by damn near everyone he meets; really, though, people don't like Raistlin because he's a JerkAss.* Jochi in the ''Literature/{{Conqueror}}'' books is disdained by his father, Genghis Khan, due to [[MamasBabyPapasMaybe suspicion]] he was conceived as a result of Borte's rape by Tartars. In RealLife, this resulted in tension between Jochi and Chagatai, which in turn was part of the reason the great khan named his third son as his successor.* ''Literature/OutboundFlight'' features a minor character who hates his Jedi sister because, since she wasn't around to do anything less-than-perfect, he was forced to endure an entire childhood of "[[WhyCouldntYouBeDifferent Why couldn't you be more like your sister?]] I bet ''she'' never [INSERT CHILDHOOD HIJINK HERE]."** Survivor's Quest has him, much older and as one of the main characters, realize that it wasn't quite like that. They did love the absent sister, and idolized their image of what she might become, but they never neglected him.** By the end of ''Literature/GalaxyOfFear'', Zak no longer feels on equal terms with his sister Tash. At the start of the series she was a {{Bookworm}}, he was the one who liked machines and action and so on. But as the series progressed and she started developing her Force talents and applying the things she picked up from studying, he felt increasingly overshadowed. Not only could she do just about anything he could do, but better, but their serious, studious uncle trusted her feelings over his, and tended to dismiss him as being childish. To their credit, Tash sympathized with Zak and their uncle respected him when he was serious, just... Tash was Force-Sensitive and increasingly able to use it. When the family stumbles so constantly into danger, that means a lot.* In their mother's eyes at least, Anna and Jesse are clearly Unfavorites in comparison to IllGirl Kate in ''Literature/MySistersKeeper''. As Jesse says, he's the "lost cause," a guy that spends all his time in a filthy garage apartment doing drugs and drinking. The unfavoritism leads to [[spoiler:him becoming an arsonist and causing his fireman father quite a lot of grief.]] Anna, on the other hand, was only born to donate blood to Kate, who has leukemia. It's scary how her mother seems to think of her not in terms of who she is as a person, but as the sum of the parts that could be used to help Kate. Their father, on the other hand, seems to think of all of them equally, though of course because of Kate's condition he has to put the other two in the back seat from time - especially Jesse, who started consider himself "invisible" within the family, since Kate and Anna are often the center of attention whenever Kate's condition worsens.* Prince Roger of Creator/DavidWeber and Creator/JohnRingo's ''Literature/PrinceRoger'' series is the Unfavorite due to his resemblance to his treasonous father and his complete lack of accomplishment, compared to his fleet-admiral sister and senior-diplomat brother.* ''Literature/DiaryOfAWimpyKid'' includes this but the role is split between Rodrick and Gregory, mostly because the favorite is ''obviously'' the much younger Manny.* In ''Literature/TheSookieStackhouseMysteries'', Sookie was unfavorite in comparison to her JerkAss brother Jason, because of her telepathy making her too weird for their little southern town. Although their grandmother was loving, she was weirded out by Sookie's ability and only acknowledged it as a gift when it would be helpful or useful for Sookie to put it to use.* Creator/MercedesLackey's ''Literature/HeraldsOfValdemar'' books have Heralds Vanyel Ashkevron and Talia Sensdaughter, both very much the unfavorite child of their respective fathers (and in Talia's case, her father's various wives as well). Slightly subverted in Vanyel's case as he's his mother's favorite (although that mostly serves to make his brothers and cousins jealous), and he eventually reconciles with his father as well. In addition to them, Lavan "Firestorm" Chitworth was the unfavorite of his family for not wanting to go into the cloth trade like all his siblings, and Skif was the unfavorite of his Uncle Londer after his mother died and left him in Londer's care. 'Happy families' and 'Focus Character Herald' are pretty much mutually exclusive terms.** Even Princess Elspeth suffered from this to a degree, despite being an only child until well into her teens. She takes after her father more than a little in looks, and given that said father not only manipulated her mother into a miserable marriage but eventually tried to murder her; Queen Selenay could never quite convince herself that she was capable of dealing with her rationally and ended up using various nannies and other proxies beyond what the whole monarch thing required for good and ill.* In ''Literature/TheDeadAndTheGone'', Alex Morales is left to take care of his siblings Julie and Briana after an asteroid hits the moon. Alex very obviously favors Briana over the more whiny Julie, especially after Briana gets asthma. However, Alex learns to like Julie after Briana disappears and [[spoiler: is soon found dead in the elevator.]]* In ''Literature/ATreeGrowsInBrooklyn'', Francie grows up dealing with her mother's favoritism for her brother Neelie. When he was born less than a year after her, their mother compared the beautiful cooing baby to the colicky, plain-looking little girl. She immediately knew she could never love them equally.* In ''Literature/TheWestingGame'', Grace Wexler's preference for beautiful daughter Angela is so extreme that she doesn't even ''recognize'' her younger daughter, Turtle, after a few drinks. Subverted in that [[spoiler: being ignored is actually ''better'' for Turtle than having her life micromanaged like it is for Angela, who's so stressed by MyBelovedSmother that she starts setting off bombs]].** Grace even refers to her daughters as Cain and Abel at one point.** Grace: "You know, of course, that if I do win the inheritance, everything I own goes to Angela." She says this with Turtle in the room. And when Turtle rushes out, Grace is bewildered.** The narration explicitly refers to Angela as "her (Grace's) favorite."* The ''Literature/{{Liavek}}'' anthologies had Nerissa Benedicti, who summed her situation up thusly: "I am the last of eight children, and any week-guest in the house can discover that everybody concerned wishes there had only been six." Nerissa ends up [[DeathSeeker joining a religion of suicides]] at the age of fourteen. (Her brother Deleon, the second Unfavorite, ran away from home on his twelfth birthday.)* In the Creator/AgathaChristie book ''Sparkling Cyanide,'' Sandra Farraday. Sandra's mother explicitly says at one point that Sandra is the most difficult and least dear to her of all her children. Also from the same book, Iris Marle seems to be rather neglected compared to her beautiful, rich older sister Rosemary. Iris doesn't really seem to resent it, though.** Another Creator/AgathaChristie example is in ''Murder With Mirrors.'' Mildred Gulbrandson, the biological daughter of Literature/MissMarple's friend Carrie Louise, is the Unfavorite as compared to Carrie Louise's adopted daughter Pippa, her stepsons Alex and Stephan, and later Pippa's daughter Gina. Poor girl just can't catch a break.** The end of the story, when Carrie Louise turns to Mildred for support and comfort and an earlier conversation between the former and Literature/MissMarple implies that much of this 'unfavoritism' was Mildred's perception.* In J.R. Ward's ''Literature/BlackDaggerBrotherhood'', Phury is the Unfavorite of his family. He was the second-born twin, which apparently is bad luck in his world. His twin, Zsadist, is kidnapped by a nanny as an infant and sold into slavery. Phury is not directly blamed for this, but it is inherent that his birth and its bad luck was the reason. His family falls apart, and notes that he had to drag his father's drunken body inside as dawn approached so that he would not die. It was also noted that when he left to find his brother, no one noticed his departure, and he did not attend his parents' funerals. He finally finds his twin, who is being horribly abused and tortured by an aristocrat, and helps him escape. In the process, he loses the lower half of one of his legs and uses a prothesis. He vows that he will help his brother, which includes beating him up on several occasions at his request. He takes a vow of celibacy, and becomes a drug addict. He eventually finds peace with his parents while withdrawing from the drugs, but spends most of the series with some serious guilt.* One of the first things we learn about Stiva in Tolstoy's ''Literature/AnnaKarenina'' is that he hugely prefers his daughter to his son. For some reason this comes off as charming and honest in the original Russian, and cold and cruel in the English translation.* [[AllThereInTheManual Annotations]] for ''Literature/{{Warbreaker}}'' reveal that, while there were legitimate tactical reasons that King Dedelin considered when he decided to send Siri to marry the God King instead of Vivenna, he ultimately was more willing to sacrifice his youngest daughter because he didn't love her ''quite'' as much as her older sister.* In ''Literature/ParableOfTheTalents'' by Creator/OctaviaButler, Asha Vere is the unfavorite to her parents, strict Christian [[TheFundamentalist fundamentalists]] who don't seem to love her. Their other child, Kamaria, died in a bombing. [[spoiler:It turns out she's adopted.]]* Claudia Kishi of ''Literature/TheBabySittersClub'' often feels like this with her parents, due to her older sister Janine being a certified genius and good at academics. However, one of the Claudia books reveals that ''Janine'' also feels like the UnFavorite because Claudia is so pretty and popular.* In Ruth Rendell's ''Literature/InspectorWexford'' series, Wexford's older daughter Sylvia, who comes off badly in his eyes (and Rendell's) even when she's been victimized. By contrast, the other daughter, Sheila, is an extremely successful actress who never does anything in the least bit wrong.* ''Literature/WashingtonSquare'''s main character Catherine Sloper is this to her father, in comparison to her older brother... who died several years before she was born and doesn't appear to have lived long enough to be named.* In ''Literature/EastOfEden'', this happens twice via GenerationXerox. Charles and Adam's father preferred Adam, which led Charles to abuse his brother. It happens again with Adam's twin boys, [[CainAndAbel Cal and Aaron]].* In Teresa Frohock's ''Literature/MiserereAnAutumnTale'', Lindsey knows that her father is never proud of her, as opposed to her brother Peter.* Creator/StephenColbert's ''Literature/IAmAmericaAndSoCanYou'' actually suggests making a conscious choice of who the favorite and unfavorite are, since it will happen anyway. On top of that, he also suggests [[CrossesTheLineTwice using it as a Carrot and the Stick approach]] to make sure the children are well-behaved.* In Creator/GeneStrattonPorter's ''Literature/TheSongOfTheCardinal'', the she-cardinal whom he kissed.-->''She had been hatched from a fifth egg to begin with; and every one knows the disadvantage of beginning life with four sturdy older birds on top of one. It was a meager egg, and a feeble baby that pipped its shell. The remainder of the family stood and took nearly all the food so that she almost starved in the nest, and she never really knew the luxury of a hearty meal until her elders had flown. That lasted only a few days; for the others went then, and their parents followed them so far afield that the poor little soul, clamouring alone in the nest, almost perished.''* The Hon. Freddie Threepwood in Creator/PGWodehouse's ''Literature/BlandingsCastle'' series. As the seemingly unnecessary "second son" who's constantly piling up debts and having to be hauled out of London, he's not a big hit with his father Lord Emsworth, who'd do anything to get him off his hands.* In Creator/GeneStrattonPorter's ''A Daughter of the Land'', Kate. Mary is clearly the Favorite, but the other sisters also had their share.-->''"I am not! But it wasn't a 'fool thing' when Mary and Nancy Ellen, and the older girls wanted to go. You even let Mary go to college two years."\\"Mary had exceptional ability," said Mrs. Bates.\\"I wonder how she convinced you of it. None of the rest of us can discover it," said Kate. ''* Practically the first thing we learn of Leah in ''Literature/TheBible'' is that "Leah was not loved." [[FromBadToWorse Things don't really improve for her, either]]. [[ThrowTheDogABone This does not escape God's notice, for He blesses her with strong fertility, resulting in many children.]]** And it doesn't stop with Jacob's wives. All his sons except Joseph were considered The Unfavorite, as Jacob lavished Joseph with a special coat that made his other sons jealous. When Joseph was taken away into Egypt without Jacob's notice, Joseph's other full brother Benjamin became the center of their father's attention.* Caine Soren and Penny from the ''Literature/{{GONE}}'' series get this a lot. Caine to the point where his mother put him up for adoption because she just had a "bad hunch" about him. (Granted, he did turn out to be evil...)** Zil gets this on a much smaller scale when he revealed that he was neglected and ignored by his parents in favor of his older, {{jerkass}} brother Zayn. Acts as a {{freudianexcuse}} for his ur...Arson, bigotry and attempted genocide.* In Creator/EDBaker's ''Literature/TheWideAwakePrincess'', Annie is AntiMagic and kept far away from her sister, mother, and father, to keep from undoing the magic spells that keep them beautiful and talented.* In ''[[http://www.amazon.com/new-baby-happy-ending-book/dp/0874492742/ref=sr_1_2?s=books&ie=UTF8&qid=1362638540&sr=1-2&keywords=happy+ending+book+the+new+baby The New Baby]]'', a picture book that was part of a 1980s series called "Happy Endings Books," about a society of anthropomorphic mice, the main character, Tippu, is afraid of becoming this, having just become a big brother. [[spoiler:The book ends with his parents realizing that they just haven't been giving him enough attention, and him coming to realize that he could come to like the baby.]]* Common in ''Literature/FlowersInTheAttic''. Cathy is her mother's unfavorite. Corrine in turn was ''her'' mother's unfavorite. This happens again with [[GenerationXerox Cathy's children]] in ''Literature/IfThereBeThorns''. Jory is the favorite, while CreepyChild awkward Bart gets less of her attention, especially after she adopts cute, blonde toddler Cindy. * In Creator/AndreNorton's ''Literature/TheZeroStone'', Jern was his mother's. His brother and sister were his father's, but the father dies first, and his mother cuts him off.* In ''Literature/AkataWitch'', Sunny's father doesn't like her. Unlike her brothers, she has to struggle to have any relationship with him at all.* In ''Literature/AYellowRaftInBlueWater'', Christine believed herself to be the unfavorite "daughter" of her "mother" Aunt Ida compared to her son Lee. That led to Christine never having another child with anyone after she had Rayona.* ''Literature/TheAmazingDaysOfAbbyHayes'' has Abby, who is the middle child and often feels left out for a variety of reasons: for one, each Hayes child has a particular skill- Abby's older sisters Eva and Isabel are skilled in sports and science, respectively, and their younger brother Alex is a tech/computer genius- but Abby's skill is creative writing, which doesn't have frequently visible results like trophies and awards. She's not hugely popular, she can't do maths (thus lowering her overall marks) and because she's old enough to be responsible but young enough to not be very outgoing, she isn't very loud or demanding, so she usually ends up fading into the background and is an afterthought to her parents. To be fair to said parents, they never actually abuse or alienate any of their kids, but their parenting does leave something to be desired.* In the ''Literature/ObsidianAndBlood'' series, Acatl ''became'' this upon deciding to be a priest for the dead instead of following his older brother Neutemoc and become a warrior. Their parents, who had been peasants, really wished for their sons to reach a higher status in society, so the younger son's decision to go off and become a priest with no wordly possessions was [[{{Understatement}} not popular]] with them. Never mind that he managed to climb the ladder and become the [[HighPriest High Priest]] of his order. It becomes a major plot point in the first book.* In ''Literature/MoreThanThis'', Seth's mother dotes on his younger brother Owen and largely ignores Seth.* Subverted in ''Literature/TheInfernalDevices'' with Nate Gray's biological parents, but with if Aunt Harriet was ever supposed to pick which one of her sister's children would become more successful, it would be Tessa.* A major source of angst for Lissa in ''Literature/VampireAcademy'', is how she was always walking in her brother's shadow.* In ''Wintergirls,'' Lia's stepmother Jennifer exhibits a comparatively mild degree of unfavoritism towards her, though this is more because she's exasperated with her refusal to get help for her eating disorder (and possibly also because she's worried about what influence Lia is having on her younger daughter).* In the ''Literature/AgeOfFire'' series, it's standard draconic instinct and tradition that all the males of a clutch will fight to the death, or at least until the loser(s) is/are driven off. At this point, they're cast out by their family, without even being given a name, and forced to fend for themselves. This is the case with the Copper, [[FreudianExcuse forming the basis for his personality]] and driving him to do what he does; he also decides that if he ever has hatchlings of his own, he won't enforce this tradition. To their credit, his siblings both independently come to the same conclusion, seeing the flaws in this system.* The children's picture book, ''You're All My Favorites'', by Sam [=McBratney=] and Anita Jeram (author and illustrator of ''Literature/GuessHowMuchILoveYou'') is a direct refutation of this. It features three bear cubs, each of which worry about being this. The first worries that he is because his siblings have patches and he doesn't. The second worries because she is the only girl bear of the group. The final one worries because he's the littlest. Their parents, however, reassure them that none of it matters. "Three favorites. You're all my favorites!"* Many scenes in ''Literature/SweetValleyHigh''--and two specific books in particular--reveal that Jessica feels like this in comparison to twin sister Elizabeth.* Jane Rizzoli in the ''Series/RizzoliAndIsles'' books (the first two, at least). Her mother is completely oblivious to and dismissive of her job as a detective, even chastising Jane when she has to leave a family dinner is order to make an arrest, asking her "Can't they do it without you?". In another instance, despite Jane having gone all out to make sure that she has a nice birthday, she focuses on and bitches about the one thing that Jane didn't do--bake a cake. But when her brother Frankie fails to buy a gift and doesn't even show up for the party, she doesn't get angry at all and dismisses his attempts at apologizing. It's so prevalent that in another scene, Jane is downright shocked when her mother takes her side in argument with Frankie, as this has apparently never happened before. The reader soon learns the root of this--she has just discovered that her husband is having an affair and Frankie and the other brothers have taken his side, finally cluing her in to what a mistake she's made favoring the boys over Jane.* Literature/JessicaDarling is this to her sister Bethany. It's a milder example than many, because her parents do genuinely care for her - [[ParentsAsPeople they just can't figure out what to do with her,]] since unlike Bethany she isn't a girly-girl who shares her mother's interests and priorities, while at the same time not being enough of a tomboy for her father to treat like the son he never had.* The main plot of the first book of the ''Literature/{{Clementine}}'' series involves Clementine being worried that she might be this after her friend Margaret tells her that in families with two children, there's the "easy one" and the "hard one." She's worried that she's the "hard one" and her parents want to get rid of her because of it.* In ''Literature/WarriorCats,'' Crookedstar suffered a childhood injury that left him with a permanently twisted jaw, which led his mother Rainflower to reject him and prefer his brother Oakheart. Unusually for this trope, Oakheart loves his brother and wants their mother to treat them the same. Their father Shellheart averts the trope by loving both his sons equally.* ''{{Literature/Fudge}}:'' Peter gets blamed by his parents for nearly everything his little brother Fudge does. It gets especially ridiculous on one occasion when Fudge loses his two front teeth in an accident while being babysat by Peter's arch-rival Sheila, and ''Peter'' is the one who gets blamed by their mother. To her credit, she apologizes to him later, and as the series goes on, Fudge is more often punished when he does something wrong.* In ''[[Literature/TheHalfbloodChronicles Elvenblood]]'' the noble elf maiden Sheyrena an Treves gets this from both parents to a degree. Her father Lord Tylar is openly emotionally abusive towards her and considers her brother Lorryn his prized possession because [[NoWomansLand she is female]]. Her mother Viridina fusses over Lorryn and is borderline neglectful towards her because 'Rena is a full blooded elf, [[spoiler: and most of her attention is focused on making sure nobody finds out the girl's (half)brother is ''[[HalfHumanHybrid not]]'']].* In ''Literature/SeekerBears'' Toklo resents his IlBoy brother Tobi because their mother dotes over Tobi. He also feels Tobi weighs them down and that they'd be better off without him. When [[spoiler:Tobi dies]] their mother [[spoiler:[[ParentalAbandonment abandons Toklo]] in her despair due to not wanting to lose both cubs due to food shortages (especially after losing previous litters).]] Afterwards Toklo begins hating his mother for [[spoiler:abandoning him]].[[/folder]]

[[folder:Live Action TV]]* No matter what Det. Goren from ''Series/LawAndOrderCriminalIntent'' does for his mother (including taking care of her while she's in the hospital) he still can't measure up to his brother, a homeless drug addict with an illegitimate son. Either way, Goren gets no respect.** Even more so, it's implied, from the father than the mother (who at least once in a while, when she's more or less in her right mind, will say something nice to him). This is thrown into some context when we learn that the mother actually had an affair, and neither parent was entirely sure whose son he really was. ** One episode portrayed a wealthy family patriarch (played by Rip Torn) who had two sons, one favorite (a talented, handsome, successful historian), the other unfavorite (a businessman with constantly-failing schemes). Each one married a woman the opposite of him--the responsible one married a screwed-up mess of a woman, while the unfavorite's wife is very dutiful and responsible; the patriarch also has favorites among these two, preferring the latter to the former. Both brothers are murdered [[spoiler: over the payout from their trust funds. Ironically, the favorite daughter-in-law planned and executed the murders: she set it up as a StrangersOnATrainPlotMurder, in which each woman would kill the other's husband. The "screwup" was originally in on the plan, but she chickened out, and the "responsible" one actually killed her own husband, as well.]] The ending implies that the patriarch has already picked his favorite and unfavorite ''grandsons''.-->'''Torn:''' My son...is dead.-->'''Goren:''' Two sons. You had...''two'' sons.** He and Eames then see the man hugging one grandson, ignoring the other and realize the entire sad cycle is just going to continue.** An earlier episode featured a murderer who had grown up as the unfavorite compared to her dead older brother, for whom she was a ReplacementGoldfish who could never live up to the impossible, MartyStu level standards supposedly set by the original. Her turn to crime was motivated by her desire to curry favor with her parents at any cost, even if she had to resort to fraud and murder. When she's arrested, she rails on her parents over their favoring her brother, even trying to cut at a portrait of him they have hanging on the wall...and her parents are more upset over the portrait being damaged than their daughter arrested for murder. * Eunice Harper/Higgins from ''Series/MamasFamily''. It's debatable just how much of her unfavoritism is in her own head.* In ''Series/{{Seinfeld}}'', George Costanza is this to his parents compared to Lloyd Braun ("Why can't you be more like Lloyd Braun?"). But Lloyd Braun was in a ''mental institution''.* An episode of ''Series/LawAndOrderSpecialVictimsUnit'' had the detectives visit a doctor who has a huge portrait of him, his wife, and his two daughters, a doctor and a lawyer, in his office. Later, they discovered the doctor also has a son... who was working as his ''janitor''. Three guesses who turns out to be the violent rapist they're searching for.** Not to mention the woman who murdered mothers as a nurse in order to "free their daughters" of the pain of caring for them. Particularly depressing at the end when she is seen watching old films of her mother playing cheerfully with her brother while she plays alone in the background.** Another episode of ''SVU'' first focused on a Latina girl whom might have been raped by a rich, white, politician's son. At first, the detectives look to charge the son, meanwhile we learn about a Latino boy who was best friends with the rich boy, and his mother whom used to be the house servant for the rich political boy's family before she suddenly quit her job. Her son was in love with the same girl as the rich boy, but the rich boy (whom we find out was a jerkass) got her drunk and took her virginity. Later the rich boy is suddenly murdered and found in a ditch. After many dead ends, the detectives start believing that the mother's son might have done it. They were right, but the reason why, wasn't solely because of the girl alone. The boy found out he was the rich boy's half-brother from an affair the father had with his mother. This was the reason the mother suddenly quit her job. She was also paid not to talk about the affair and cause a scandal. The last scene shows the Latino boy pleading to his political white father, asking why he got rejected and not accepted like his half-brother. ** Amanda Rollins clearly is the unfavorite of her mother despite the fact that her sister, Kim, just happens to be ''in jail'' for robbery, assault and drugging a guy that caused him to rape a woman. And yet, Amanda is the one Beth Anne chews out for not being a good daughter. * Played for laughs with GOB of ''Series/ArrestedDevelopment''. Despite being the eldest son, GOB is loathed by both his parents for his often idiotic behavior, and as such is extremely jealous/admiring of his younger brother Michael, the family "favorite". Averted in that Michael hates being the favorite and GOB seems happier without any responsibility** Pretty much cut out by Lucille in the pilot episode:--->"If you're saying I play favorites, you're wrong. I love all my children equally!" ''(flashback to earlier the same day)'' "...I don't care for GOB."** And this later bit:--->'''Lucille''': You're my third-least favorite child!\\'''Michael''': ''(shrugs)'' ...I'm okay with that.\\'''The Narrator''': ''(Later, as GOB enters the scene)'' And then Lucille's fourth-least favorite child showed up.** Even when [[spoiler:Lindsey is revealed to be adopted]] Lucille mentions she still loves [[spoiler:Lindsey as much as her other children]] and even more than GOB.** Buster seems to be a secondary unfavorite to George Sr. The fact that his twin brother, Oscar, might be Buster's real father somewhat explains it though.* Kara "Starbuck" Thrace of ''Series/{{Battlestar Galactica|2003}}'' was The Unfavorite and apparently an only child. We learn that Starbuck's mother Socrata was in the Colonial military and Starbuck joined up largely to win her approval. When she graduated Viper school and earned her commission, her mother berates her for not being first in her class, despite managing to become an officer rather than an NCO like Socrata was.** Not quite a straight example. Socrata was bastardly and abusive to Kara because she knew Kara had a special destiny and didn't think she was trying hard enough to live up to her natural ability.* Series/SherlockHolmes appears to have been one in the Granada adaption of "The Greek Interpreter." Holmes does a double-take when he spots his brother, Mycroft, polishing their father's old antique magnifying glass. Evidently, it was the government bureaucrat -- ''not'' the world-famous detective -- who was deemed worthy of inheriting it.-->'''Sherlock:''' Irony.* Jan Brady of ''Series/TheBradyBunch''.** Jan was actually a {{Fanon}} [[AlternativeCharacterInterpretation interpretation]]. In her case, she was actually just [[OvershadowedByAwesome overshadowed by Marsha]]. Now the 90s Parody movies on the otherhand, takes this trope and runs with it.* Curious example on ''Series/DirtySexyMoney''. In a first-season episode, matriarch Letitia says that Brian and Jeremy are their father's unfavorites; considering the fact that Jeremy is a drug-addicted layabout and that Brian isn't Tripp's biological son, this makes sense. But after learning about Brian's illegitimacy, Tripp starts liking him ''more,'' giving him a company job and calling him 'son' for the first time in the series.* Possibly the example most familiar to American TV viewers, Robert from ''Series/EverybodyLovesRaymond''. With the slight reversal that Robert is actually the elder brother himself.-->'''Marie (to Raymond):''' "You can never turn your back on talent."-->''(Turns her back on Robert and walks out the door)''** Robert was originally going to be cast as ''shorter'' than Ray and being forced to ''literally'' look up to his younger brother. The actor being ''taller'' took the gag from funny to hysterical.** It gets to the point that, when Marie tells Robert he was always the favorite, a lie used in an attempt to get Robert to conceive a child with Amy, nobody believes it. At all.* Lorne in ''Series/{{Angel}}''. When he visits home for the first time in years, his parents say "We ate the wrong son." His cousins used their empathetic powers to hunt. Lorne used his to read people's destinies and so was considered a freak. He preferred music over hunting, even though music didn't really exist in his dimension.* ''{{Taxi}}'': Alex's sister Charlotte worriedly drops by to tell him their father Joe had suffered a heart attack. Contrary to what she expected, Alex doesn't even mind. May sound like an ''uncharacteristically'' selfish act from him, but it turns out in a later conversation that apart from deserting the family frequently since Alex was a kid, their father lent much less attention to him than to Charlotte, for whom Joe bought a brand-new car as her 21st birthday present.* An interesting example in ''Series/{{Frasier}}'': ''both'' Crane brothers considered themselves to be The Unfavorite, though in reality neither was. Though this gave birth to a destructive competiveness between them and rendered them utterly incapable of working together for any length of time, they both concede in one episode that their competiveness motivated them to excel academically and professionally.** This was specifically in their mother's eyes. To their father, they both sort of ''were'' unfavorites due to Martin having nothing in common with either of them. Both grow closer to Martin throughout the series, although Frasier (whom Martin lives with, and who is practically rugged and manly compared to Niles) probably becomes closer.* Monica on ''Series/{{Friends}}'' is treated like this by her parents, while her brother can do no wrong (the reason given in the show is that they thought their mother was barren, which means that Ross was their "Miracle Child," and by the time Monica was born, the amazement was over.) Possibly why she is so screwed up. Interestingly, Ross actually calls them out on it a couple times.** Though when her dad [[MyGodWhatHaveIDone realizes]] that they've been doing this, he gives her his Porsche to make up for it, so, you know, "every cloud".** The episode in which Chandler [[FakingTheDead fakes Ross's death as a joke]] ends with Ross on the phone to his mom explaining he's fine. "No, Mom, even if I had died, you wouldn't be childless ... ''Monica!''"** The odd thing about this situation is that it's actually The Unfavorite who grows up to be the happier and more successful child. 'Star child' Ross gets divorced three times, has two illegitimate children, struggles with mental anger issues at one point, and although a doctor of paleontology, has a rather mediocre academic career. Meanwhile Monica is HappilyMarried to a loving husband, [[spoiler: adopts baby twins]] and becomes a renowned Executive Chef at a very fancy restaurant with people queuing outside for her food. In any other family, the mother would be disowning ''Ross'' and praising Monica to the skies. ** Also when Ross' daughter Emma is born his dad congratulates him on his first child, completely forgetting that he has another one, a son named Ben from his first marriage. So there's also an unfavorite grandson.*** This was LampshadeHanging the fact that by this point, Ben had been nearly BrotherChucked insofar as he was rarely referenced anymore.** Chandler, despite being an only child claims he still suffered from this trope, because his parents prefered his ''imaginary friend'' to him. More ParentalNeglect and HilariouslyAbusiveChildhood though. (Interestingly he and Monica eventually fall in love, possibly because they understand each other's insecurities so well). ** Averted with Rachel, who - when compared to her spoiled sisters Jill (Reese Witherspoon) and Amy (Christina Applegate) - is apparently the only child that her father (Ron Leibman) can claim to be proud of, thanks to CharacterDevelopment that allowed her to grow and become a more responsible adult.* Chuck Bass on ''Series/GossipGirl'' is a strange example, as he is an only child for two-thirds of season one. Sadly, once his step-siblings [[spoiler: Serena and Eric]] move in, he still obviously takes a back seat to everyone else.** Also Blair, who is an only child but continually overshadowed in her mother's eyes by Serena and later even Jenny. Heartbreakingly.* In ''Series/HowIMetYourMother'', Robin's father wanted a boy so badly that he treated her as a boy growing up, even naming her after himself - Robin Charles Scherbatsky, Jr. This lasted until her parents divorced and she started living with her mother and became a girly teenage pop star in Canada. And yet, she still longs for her father's approval.* Mohinder Suresh of ''Series/{{Heroes}}'' is his father's Unfavorite, as compared to his IllGirl older sister Shanti. This is due to having been conceived expressly in order to be a cure for her, but born too late; Chandra half-hated him for the failure, half-didn't want to get emotionally attached again.** Nathan Petrelli of ''Series/{{Heroes}}'' could also be said to be the Unfavorite of his family. [[EvilMatriarch Angela]] actually told Peter he was her favorite compared to Nathan. Especially since it's later revealed in season 3 that [[spoiler: Nathan was the only one in the family to be born without powers and had to be ''given'' powers via a formula.]]** Although [[spoiler: Arthur Petrelli does claim that Nathan is his favorite, but given that he previously tried to have Nathan killed, the truth of this statement is debatable.]]** And Angela's claims that Peter is her favorite are somewhat suspect [[spoiler: given that Angela spent the whole of Season One helping BigBad Linderman manipulate things so that Peter would become a living bomb and Nathan could eventually become President of the United States, allowing The Company the defacto ability to rule the world.]]** And also in the first season, when Angela tells Peter he's her favorite, she goes on to add that she knows it never looked that way when he was growing up, as he often ignored while his parents focused on Nathan. In "Six Months Ago", Peter also mentions having never gotten along with his father and being unsurprised that he wanted nothing to do with his graduating from nursing school. The Petrelli parents ignoring Peter while he was growing up, leaving Peter to turn to his big brother every time he needed help, seems to form the crux of the brothers' unusually close relationship.** Apparently this has been retconned or reverted, because Angela begins to treat him with respect in season four. It culminates in her horror when she discovers that [[spoiler:Nathan has had his throat slashed open by Sylar. She even closes his eyes as a sign of respect for both him and for the dead. She goes so far as capturing Sylar, burning a dead shapeshifter who looks like Sylar in order to throw off suspicion, getting shapeshifter Sylar to turn into Nathan, and then having Matt Parkman alter Sylar's memories and personality to actually BECOME Nathan Petrelli. Creeeeepy. It's implied at the brief part of season five we're shown that Sylar's personality is resurfacing.]]** The Graphic Novel "Truths", it's revealed that the only reason Nathan was given powers synthetically was because Arthur felt that powers had been given to the wrong son. This mostly stems from his belief that Peter is too soft-hearted. Moments before his death though, Arthur expresses pride in the fact that both his sons are willing to do what needs to be done, so Peter may no longer qualify. At least not from his father.* On ''Series/TheLeague'', Taco is a pot-smoking moron who has no job, no girlfriend, no goal for anything in life...and his mom considers him far more successful than brother Kevin, a happily married lawyer. * In ''Series/JudgingAmy'', one episode feature a large, loud, and boisterous family who did not know what to make of their youngest(?) child, a quiet, apparently unathletic, and introverted kid. Apparently, ''forcing'' him into dog piles and over-enthusiastic games of football constituted abuse so the family had to learn AnAesop about different personalities.* An episode of ''Series/LoisAndClark'' featured the [[EvilMatriarch mother]] of a deceased criminal known as "Bad Brain Johnson". To try and get her attention, her Un Favorite second son built a fully functional mind control machine, to offer her the whole world as a gift. Not only was he met with equal disdain as usual, but ''not even the machine at [[ExplosiveOverclocking full power]]'' could force her to tell her son she loved him.* Arnold Rimmer in ''Series/RedDwarf'' is a powerful example of an Unfavorite. His brothers were all high-flyers in the Space Corps; Arnold was a technician, the second lowest in rank on a mining ship. While he's a comedic character, some of the abuse he goes through would reach [[TheWoobie Woobie]] standards, and goes a long way to explaining why Rimmer's such a git. Unfortunately, it's ''still'' difficult to side with him, given the frequency with which he [[FreudianExcuse uses his screwed-up past as a carte-blanche excuse for being a jerkass]]. In some of the darker moments of the books, the tragic side ''does'' become clear.** Not least in the story which shows just how small the difference in history between him and [[TheAce Ace Rimmer]] (what a guy!) is. [[spoiler: Ace was held back a year and it served as a wake up call to him that he needed to be better.]]** There are several scenes in the show which give Rimmer a more sympathetic POV. Curiously, a deleted scene in Series 6 shows that his brothers all ended up screwed up in later life, making Arnie perhaps the least screwed up of the lot ultimately. Another source of his angst is in Series 2, where he laments that he just wanted his father to congratulate him on something, but will never get the chance now.** Then in Series X one of his brothers Howard appears and reveals that although he claimed to be an Officer he was actually a vending machine repairman, just like Rimmer.** Series X goes a ''long'' way into explaining why he's the unfavorite: [[spoiler: He's actually the result of an affair between his mother and the gardener. After a [[HeroicBSOD BSOD]], he realizes that his real father would have been proud of his accomplishments and he no longer hears the man he believed was his father belittling him in his head.]]* There's a bit of this buzzing around Lore, from ''Series/StarTrekTheNextGeneration'', who considers Data the favorite of their father. The "older brother" of the two androids Noonien Soong created, Lore (who has emotional awareness, while Data didn't), went [[AIIsACrapshoot a bit off the rails]] and was deactivated (but not before he was able to call a giant life sucking entity to the colony where he was built in order to destroy it). During his first appearance in ''Datalore'', Lore spends a lot of time convincing Data that Lore was the second of the two built: to "perfect" the mistakes Soong made with Data (turned out it was the other way round. Lore [[UncannyValley terrified the colonists, who petitioned Soong to make one ''less'' human]]). The whole favoritism thing comes to a head in the episode ''Brothers'' when discovering that Soong has spent the last years of his life perfecting an emotion chip for Data without the "faults" that Lore's had. Lore deactivates Data, takes his place, steals the emotion chip and murders their father before leaving.-->'''Lore:''' You didn't fill Data with substandard parts, did you? No, that honour was bestowed upon me. You owe me, old man. Not him. ''Me.''* ''Series/{{Supernatural}}'': Even though Dean's Daddy issues are a lot more obvious, you could say that both of them fit this trope. The only affection Dean ever gets from John is when John is possessed or about to die, a regrettable incident that happened when he was 9 gets hung over his head for 17 years. And as for Sam, he's disowned when he wants to be normal, John actually blames him for his brother's impending death in "In My Time Of Dying" and he gets two utterly dismal goodbyes while Dean at least gets an apology and a smile. And the worst thing? He told Dean that he might have to kill Sam if he goes bad, and Dean thought he had to basically commit suicide (just not right away) because John gave him an order and he failed and, as shown by ''Long Distance Caller'' is still devoted to his father. Oh, John. You might have been a good man but you failed at being even a halfway decent father.** Lampshaded by the Yellow-Eyed Demon who tells Dean that even though John argued and yelled at Sam a lot, it was 'more concern than he's ever shown you.'** Strange version: Lucifer regards himself as this, but Gabriel points out that they all know that God loved Lucifer more than any of the other angels, more than Michael and more than Gabriel himself. The reason Gabriel believes Lucifer hates humans? He felt that God cared about them more and would demote him to this trope.* In an episode of ''Series/ThirdRockFromTheSun'', it's revealed that Mary's sister Renata was the favorite of the Albright family:-->'''Mary''': The minute she was born, my life changed. I mean, she was showered with attention, she was given everything, she was supported endlessly and I had to stand by and rinse out her things!\\'''Nina''': ''[astonished]'' Wow... so you're the ''good'' sister?* ''Series/WizardsOfWaverlyPlace'': To be honest - Alex ''does'' bring it upon herself.* ''YoungDracula'': Despite being the child that most takes after him, Ingrid is consistently ignored and humiliated by her sexist father.* One of the most famous routines of the ''[[Series/TheSmothersBrothersComedyHour Smothers Brothers]]'' involved them arguing about which one their mother loved most. Tommy, despite being older, gets the worst of the unfavorite treatment. While his brother Dickie got a bike, Tommy got a wagon with only one wheel. And instead of getting a dog, Tommy got a chicken.* Carmen in ''Series/TheGeorgeLopezShow''. Her mother, her father and her grandmother like her brother Max more.** It's not so much that they like Max more, he's just a lot easier for them to deal with compared to Carmen, as her problems were usually a lot more serious than Max's. Angie herself calls George on this in the episode "I Only Have Eyes For You" after George punishes Carmen more harshly than Max and she accuses him of liking Max better.-->'''Angie''': No! It's just that he's easier right now. I know she's a handful, but you can't dismiss all her problems as teenage drama, you have two kids and you should be treating them equally.** In the later seasons it actually was the opposite. Carmen's problems were much more serious than Max's were, and he felt unloved and ignored.* On ''Series/{{Charmed}}'', [[KidFromTheFuture Chris]] seems to be not just the Unfavorite of his father (for complicated backstory reasons involving an alternate future), but of the universe in general: his brother is the ChosenOne by virtue of being the first child born between a Charmed One (a trio of Chosen Ones in their own right) and a [[OurAngelsAreDifferent Whitelighter]]. Chris is...the second such child, which is apparently less impressive in terms of destiny, and winds up with a bit of inferiority complex as a result.** Later, when they already know he's the KidFromTheFuture and she's already pregnant with him:-->'''Piper:''' Damn, this was easier with your brother. The ForceField blocked about everything...-->'''Chris:''' Hey! You used a force field with him and not with me?!-->'''Piper:''' Oh, no, no, that was his, not mine.-->'''Chris:''' WHAT?! HE HAD POWERS ''ON THE UTERUS''?!* In ''Series/VeronicaMars'' Cassidy Casablancas, the younger of two sons, was clearly the unfavorite as the victim of bullying by his father and the 'favorite', his elder brother, as the dad and sibling had competitions to see who could make him cry first. This character would also come under the AllOfTheOtherReindeer umbrella.* In ''Series/{{Dallas}}'', J.R. Ewing's FreudianExcuse was that Jock and Miss Ellie were constantly comparing him to Bobby and finding him wanting.** Gary was actually more explicitly Jock's Unfavorite due to his supposed weakness, alcoholism, and disinterest in the family business. Still, Gary was Ellie's favorite, and Bobby was Jock's, leaving J.R. to be the one son who was the favorite of nobody. And while Jock and J.R. were, at least, pretty close, at times Miss Ellie barely tolerated J.R. * A PlayedForDrama example from ''Series/MadMen''. Justified in-universe in that Don was the bastard son of a whore being raised by his father's widow and family.* Poor, poor Purple Parrots. ''LegendsOfTheHiddenTemple'' seemed to put the shortest, slowest players on Purple Parrots, to the point where, in challenge wins, they are dead last. * On ''Series/BoyMeetsWorld'', Eric is implied to have become this in later seasons. Though it is PlayedForLaughs.** Earlier on, Cory considers himself to be this, although a lot of that is MiddleChildSyndrome. Eric is actually usually established as Alan's favorite early on, which Alan is eventually forced to admit to and apologize for when he discovers this is a big part of the reason that Eric is so lazy and spoiled.* In ''Series/{{Victorious}}'', Trina is implied to be this. How much? After getting her wisdom teeth removed, her parents went on vacation for the sole purpose of not wanting to take care of her.** It's not without justification. Tori has a nice, caring and generous personality. While Trina tends to act like a whiny brat to get her way who has to hang out with her sisters friends because she can't make any on her own.* In the episode of ''Series/{{Leverage}}'' "The Snow Job", despite being the one that practically runs the crooked business, his father clearly favors the older fun loving air head son. It comes back to bite him when it's the "golden son" who ends up making the move that gets them all arrested. * Unfavorite ''pets'' appear from time to time on the various ''Series/AnimalPlanetHeroes'' shows, when an irresponsible owner takes excellent care of one dog/cat/horse/whatever, while allowing another to starve in the yard without shelter or medical care.* Oh god ''Series/{{Skins}}'' loves this one; Chris became an unfavorite after his brother died, Freddie is constantly passed over for his attention-seeking sister Karen, Cassie is ignored in favor of her baby brother, Katie's mum has always favored her over Emily, and in Gen 3 the [[spoiler:Nick and Matty]] situation is... complicated. Sid manages to be the unfavorite despite being an only child - his father constantly wonders why Sid can't be more like his best friend Tony (who is actually a borderline-sociopathic ManipulativeBastard but hides it well).* ''Series/TheBigBangTheory'' has poor Leonard. As he says:--> "If you'd like to took at the relationship between nurturing and growth, I'd like to point out that my brother is 8 inches taller than me."** Given the way his mother is described (and acted in her appearances on the show), it's kinda clear that she was dispassionate at best towards all of her children and her husband. Leonard, however, seems to have gotten the worst of it.* ''Series/{{Smallville}}'': [[AlternateUniverse Earth-2]] [[BastardBastard Tess]], proving that despite [[BrokenBird her crap life]], our Tess is actually better off without being raised as a Luthor. Though at least she was still alive, unlike Earth-2 Lex, who was apparently ''also'' The Unfavorite. Apparently neither of them had a chance against their superpowered adoptive brother, Earth-2 Clark.** Poor Tess can't seem to catch a break with Earth-2 Lionel in either world, given that on Earth-1- even though Lionel acknowledges that [[InTheBlood she is]] [[YourApprovalFillsMeWithShame definitely]] [[ManipulativeBastard a Luthor]]- he still treats her like crap and considers her both inferior and expendable.** The irony of the situation is that Lex thinks ''he's'' The Unfavorite. Granted, [[MagnificentBastard Lionel]] is far from the greatest father in the world, but he didn't get [[ParentalAbandonment abandoned]] to a rough life probably on the streets like [[BastardBastard Lucas]] or to an OrphanageOfFear and then an [[AbusiveParents abusive]] household like [[BrokenAce Tess]]. He might not like their father, but at least Lionel considered Lex worth ''something'', unlike his half-siblings. (It's heavily implied that Lionel abandoned Lucas and Tess just to see how they'd both fair without his influence, using two different methods- allowing Lucas to be raised in a much poorer neighborhood by a single mother, and removing Tess from her mother completely. No word on why the hell her mother was okay with this plan.)* Poor Edith from ''Series/DowntonAbbey''. Her older sister Mary is her father's favorite, and her younger sister Sybil is clearly her mother's favorite. That leaves her as the overlooked middle child.** Lampshaded in series 4.-->'''Robert''': I love all of my children equally.-->'''Edith''': I don't know why people say that when it's hardly ever true. * This trope showed up once on ''Series/{{ER}}'', as the favored child was laying in a hospital because of something The UnFavorite was MisBlamed for.* Impressively averted in ''Series/MalcolmInTheMiddle'', where despite Reese being a delinquent, stupid, slacking D-student who causes more trouble than all his siblings combined (which is saying something), Lois doesn't treat him any worse than she treats Malcolm, the family prodigy. In fact, when a SadistTeacher tries to blackmail her by claiming she's never risk Malcolm's reputation to save Reeses's, rather than dismiss Reese for being a failure, she claims she would throw Malcolm under the bus for Reese in a heartbeat -- [[BecauseYouCanCope because Malcolm can always take care of himself]], while Reese needs to be protected. The sadist teacher's skepticism is destroyed when Lois' firstborn Francis suddenly shows up and begs her to be let back in.** However in the episode 'Hal sleepwalks' Hal in sleepwalking state does admit that he prefers Reese over Malcolm because Malcolm "is creepy" and Reese is "normal, like him".* In ''Series/XenaWarriorPrincess'', [[ButtMonkey Joxer]] was disdained by his family. His parents are warlords, his brother Jett is an assassin, and Joxer is a clumsy wimp who can't do anything right. The family is embarrassed by his other brother Jace for being CampGay, but they respect him because he's ''successful'' as a singer and musician. Joxer eventually makes peace with his two brothers.* Series/StarTrekEnterprise's Malcolm Reed failed to follow his family's naval tradition, joining Starfleet instead because of a fear of drowning. This is heavily implied to have made his father- a life-long navy man- rather cold and distant out of disapproval. There's no evidence that his sister was favored more than he was, but it's pretty likely that he would have felt like the Unfavorite anyway* In ''Series/TheVampireDiaries'', Damon Salvatore considered himself to be this to his father Guiseppe, on account of his willful and rebellious nature (in contrast to his more [[TheDutifulSon dutiful]] brother Stefan) leading to all manner of sibling rivalry later on. Although Guiseppe's attitude towards his sons does at least have some basis in reality - Stefan genuinely was the better-behaved and more moral of the two - his treatment of Damon borders on [[AbusiveParents parental abuse]]. The same kind of situation arose between Klaus Mikaelson, who was somewhat arrogant and impulsive as a boy, and his more sensible elder brother Elijah - when we see a flashback of the family, their father Mikael is shown punishing Klaus incredibly severely, publicly humiliating him and actually coming pretty close to ''killing'' the boy just for pulling a dumb prank on his brother. And it only got worse when Mikael discovered that Klaus was not in fact his biological son. Some time down the road, Mikael actually devotes his life to attempting to kill Klaus - admittedly, Klaus is an AxCrazy [[BigBad vampire overlord]] by this point, but it's heavily implied that he was The Unfavorite right from the start, whether he deserved to be or not.* Max from "Series/TheThundermans" He is clearly the least favorite child in the house hold. His parents constantly ignore him, make fun of him (along with his siblings), call him stupid, imply they love the other children more, etc. And it causes him to have many issues. A lot of times they don't want him around. While his mother has made it clear that she loves him, he's still treated like crap and believes that his family will turn against him.* ''Series/TheBorgias'' Rodrigo Borgia heaps all of his affection on his sweet daughter Lucrezia, and his younger son [[SpoiledBrat Juan]], completely overlooking his eldest son [[TheDutifulSon Cesare]]. While the inept and obnoxious Juan is encouraged to pursue the military career Cesare always wanted, Cesare is forced into the Priesthood against his will, and is regularly treated harshly by his father while Juan's frequent crimes and mistakes are [[EasilyForgiven swept under the rug.]] Rodrigo does eventually reconcile with Cesare somewhat, admitting that he finds Cesare so hard to love because he is a cold, ambitious MagnificentBastard, and therefore [[YouAreWhatYouHate he reminds Rodrigo too much of himself.]]* Chris from ''Series/EverybodyHatesChris'' is treated far worst than both his younger brother and sister throughout the whole series.* In ''Series/TheWestWing'', Ellie Bartlet clearly sees herself this way when it comes to her father; he swears it's not true. Incidentally, he says that she's "always belonged to Abbey," which could make ''him'' The Unfavorite ''parent.'' * In ''Series/BreakingBad'', Jesse sees himself as this - and it's somewhat understandable, given that his parents kick him out (twice), won't help him when he's homeless, and his dad snubs him even after he's gone through rehab and off the drugs (of course, this is all in hopes that he'll clean up his act). Compare their treatment of Jesse to that of his younger brother Jake, who Jesse imagines to be his parents' darling. Somewhat subverted in that Jake claims that all his parents ever talk about (despite him not being around) is Jesse. For the record, Jesse actually seems to want to form a relationship with his quiet, stressed out brother, and only decides not to when he realizes he's a bad influence.* In ''Series/HouseOfAnubis'', Patricia is implied to be this. Early in the first season, when making a desperate call to her mother (while believing Joy has been killed), there was just one line that, while it never really was explored in detail, brought up some theories about her home life.---> "No, mum, this is not just another bid for attention. One of my friends could be dead!"** And then we met her twin sister Piper in season 2, who is nicer and more talented than Patricia, further supporting the idea. However, since her family life has never been explored, this is still not known for sure. * Appeared in ''Series/TheGoldenGirls'' between Dorothy and her sister. Dorothy felt that she was the Unfavorite daughter and Gloria the favorite, but Gloria later points out that Dorothy was actually the favorite, and that Sophia doted on her less because she was the strong, trustworthy one. The real Unfavorite, however, was their brother Phil, who was variously described as a cross-dresser, a moocher and generally trailer-trash. Sophia didn't like his wife or kids much, either. ** Blanche has also suggested that she was the Unfavorite, because she became boy-crazy and a troublemaker as a teenager. It seems more likely though that she was actually at least her father's favorite, but just didn't receive the adoration her ego demanded.* ''Series/IClaudius'' has Claudius as this, his father died while he was still young and his mother prefers the older brother Germanicus. Before she commits suicide she apologises to Claudius for this but says she wished he had died instead of Germanicus. Despite this Germanicus was one of the only people nice to Claudius and when he dies Claudius says he was dearer to him then anybody else. * The ''Series/{{JAG}}'' episode "Desert Son" has Lieutenant Williams, son of a retired General who received the Medal of Honor in Vietnam. It doesn't help that in addition to being overshadowed by his brother, a model Marine officer until his death, but he's also a screw-up in general who refuses to own up for his own failings.* The titular ''Series/DrQuinnMedicineWoman'' seems to be this, given the condescending way her family treats her when she returns to Boston to see her ailing mother--with the exception of her mother, ''no one'' in her family shows any gratitude when her treatment saves her mother's life, instead choosing to be outraged and disgusted that she used Native American rather than traditional medicine. Even her mother is reluctant until her symptoms improve. This treatment crops up again when they come to visit her in Colorado. All because she chose to be studious and focused on being a doctor rather than etiquette lessons and finding a husband.* Grant Ward from ''Series/AgentsOfShield'' was implied to be the unfavorite of his whole family for allegedly trying to drown his little brother Thomas and later attempted to burn his parents house down. His older brother, Christian, became a successful Senator. [[spoiler:It was later revealed that both Grant and Christian were the unfavorites of their parents. Thomas was the only one their mother didn't abuse, causing Christian to hate and abuse him (including throwing him down a well and blaming Grant). He also abused Grant. Ward later killed Christian and his parents as revenge.]]* ''Series/NightAndDay'''s Ryan Harper has evidently lived his whole life in sister Jane's shadow, which probably explains why he's so bitter and twisted. Dennis Doyle also feels like an un-favourite since he's the only child in his family who has a different father (or so he thinks), though Alex pretty much treats him like a son.* In ''Series/DCIBanks'', Alan Banks is disliked by his father primarily because he became a policeman, which the father regards as joining the enemy because of the miner's strike during the Thatcher years. However, it also seems that even as a boy, nothing Alan did was good enough. Alan's younger brother was always the father's golden boy, despite becoming a venture capitalist, which should have been an anathema to the staunchly unionist father.* In ''Series/CoronationStreet'', David and Sarah Louise Platt, in comparison to Nick, their elder brother adored by Gail, are this. The worst case of this was in the 2013 story for David. Nick slept with David's wife Kylie only for her to discover she was pregnant a short time later. The rest of the family outright plotted to keep this a secret from David and never did anything more than give Nick a cross word. All this, only for the entire family to ostracise David after they learn he found out about the cheating and was behind the recent hate campaign against Nick. Nick's wife Leanne instantly forgave Nick for cheating on her, whilst the entire family treated David as some horrible monster for 'trying to kill' Nick in a traffic accident — conveniently ignoring the fact David was in the van with Nick at the time and it truly was an accident.* Though they don't mean to, Devin's parents in ''Series/TheKicks'' visibly favor her over Bailey. They set out to change this once they realize it.* On ''Series/TheGoodPlace'' Tahaini turns out to have been massively in the shadow of her sister, a huge overachiever in every field of endeavor. When her sister auctions off a lunch date with herself, their parents bid $5 million for a meal they can have for free at any time. When their parents die, Tahaini is stunned to find they didn't even spell her name right in their will. [[/folder]]

[[folder:Music]]* The premise of the song "Better Version of You" by Paul and Storm is the parents informing The Unfavorite that his unborn sibling will be the favorite.* The song "Lonely Boy" by Andrew Gold is about a boy who believes he's this after his younger sister is born and his mother tells him they need to attend to her needs because she's a baby. He ultimately leaves home six months after his eighteenth birthday "to find the love he had lost." (Many of the details match up with Andrew Gold's own life, but Gold has denied the song being autobiographical.)* Jonathan Aaron Steel, the {{protagonist}} of Music/{{WASP}}'s epic concept album ''The Crimson Idol'' is this, forever unfavourably compared to his brother Michael, and the problem intensifies after Michael's tragic death.[[/folder]]

[[folder:Newspaper Comics]]* April from ''ComicStrip/ForBetterOrForWorse'' was the BlackSheep and completely ignored by almost her entire family (the main exception being her grandfather). The fact that she's regarded by much of the {{Hatedom}} as being the strip's OnlySaneMan is probably very much related to this fact.** Making this even harsher, creator Lynn Johnson admitted that the Patterson family [[WriteWhoYouKnow was based on her own]], and that April represented the second daughter she wanted but never had. Apparently that went out the window, since as noted above, April is often the victim of InformedWrongness.* Peter Fox from ''ComicStrip/FoxTrot'' tends to be this in the Fox Family.** All three of the Fox kids do crazy things. Peter, being the oldest, tends to draw more attention since his zany antics include things like [[DrivesLikeCrazy driving like a maniac]], skipping homework, playing a guitar loudly and badly, and wrecking the house by throwing a football around indoors. In comparison, Paige's obsessive shopping, Jason's scientific screw-ups, and their mutual back-and-forth teasing is kind of small potatoes.* When his older brother Chad is visiting from college, Jeremy from the strip ''ComicStrip/{{Zits}}'' seems to fall into this.** This wasn't helped by early depictions of Chad, which gave him a gleaming, perfect smile, the rest of his head unseeable, atop a perfect body to go with the notion that he could do no wrong. Later depictions make him look...like Jeremy with a beard.[[/folder]]

[[folder: Professional Wrestling]]* Wrestling/{{CHIKARA}}: Wrestling/{{UltraMantis Black}} treated Crossbones this way when [=UMB=] was the leader of the Order of the Neo-Solar Temple. [=UMB=] fawned over Hydra and [[Wrestling/HunterJohnston Delirious]], but always belittled Crossbones. This despite Crossbones being the only loyal member of the group (Delirious, Vökoder [Tim Donst] and Hydra [unmasked and repackaged as Dieter Von Steigerwalt]) all abandoned the Order for the BDK.)[[/folder]]

[[folder: Religion]]* Shows up a lot in the Bible:** King Saul of Israel viewed himself as this when compared to [[TheAce David]]. In this case, however, Saul had actively made himself this by disobeying God repeatedly and even then God still made it clear that Saul was to be treated as his anointed king until he personally removed him. David never over-stepped his bounds and, despite having many opportunities to do so, never tried to kill Saul lest he also lose God's favor. ** The elder son in the parable of the Prodigal Son, feeling bad because his father was rejoicing over the lost son returning safely.* In Catholicism, [[PatronSaint Saint Therese of Lisieux]]'s sister Léonie was always the odd one out. Sickly, learning-disabled, possibly autistic, she'd been repeatedly beaten by a servant as a toddler. She was regarded as an embarrassment to her own family. The other "perfect" sisters all went into the Carmelite order. Finally making it as a sister of the Visitation of Caen after several tries at various convents, Léonie completed her life happily. There is a movement now to [[TakeThat make her a saint]] of unfavorites, marginalized people and autistics. There is even a mission of sisters called the Léonie League, which proposes to found a new religious order especially for autistic monks and nuns.[[/folder]]

[[folder:Sports]]* New York baseball has [[UsefulNotes/MLBTeams two teams]]. The Yankees, perennial playoff contenders, 27 time world champions, rich as all hell...[[MyFriendsAndZoidberg and the Mets]]. Note that for some New Yorkers, this makes the ''Mets'' the favorites, because they're pitiable, lovable losers most of the time, while the Yankees are perpetually successful.* Chicago is the same way. The White Sox are the successful world champions while the Cubs...perpetual underdogs.* Los Angeles has two pro basketball teams: The Lakers, 17-time league champions and home to some of the greatest players in the game's history... and the Clippers, who have long been one of the biggest jokes in sports. ** That was until 2 seasons ago when the team changed hands and [[TookALevelInBadass secured real talent and a strong head coach]]. As of the 2013-14 season they are considered serious contenders and Clippers tickets now actually sell out.* Los Angeles also has the Dodgers. 6-Time World Champs and another of Baseball's most celebrated squads. And then they have the Angels, a sad-sack expansion team who, for four decades, could never catch a break. The Angels came out of nowhere and won the 2002 world series which brought the team to prominence. Both teams are now respectable draws and sell out most of their games.* In the [[UsefulNotes/AmericanFootball NFL]], Eli Manning was treated this way by the sports media, compared to his older, record breaking, SuperBowl winning brother Peyton Manning whom the sports media treated like quarterback royalty. This became subverted, after Eli lead the New York Giants to a Superbowl victory against Tom Brady's New England Patriots in the 2007-2008 season, when the team seemed unbeatable and was one win away from completing a perfect season. He did it again against the same team in 2011-2012 season, surpassing his older brother and finally getting the sports media's respect. [[/folder]]

[[folder:Tabletop Games]]* ''TabletopGame/{{Warhammer 40000}}'' backstory has strong vibes of this in the Primarchs. With a few exceptions the vast majority of them defected because of their father's disapproval and/or withering apathy. In the words of Roboute Guilliman, "The Emperor was a great scientist, a great leader, but a terrible father".** The Emperor's main problem was that he had a very clear idea of what his ''generals'' should be like, but neglected to consider that those generals even saw him ''as'' a father. As a result, you got Lorgar - who saw an entire world annihilated to teach him not to be religious; Perturabo - whose hopes and dreams were straight-out ignored in favor of "here is a siege, go fight it"; Fulgrim - whose obsession with perfection was left unchecked until it consumed him with the aid of a daemon; Angron - who saw the people he cared about left to die because the Emperor abducted him from a hopeless battle rather than deploying his high-tech military in support; Magnus - who was publicly humiliated; Mortarion - who spent years fighting to free his homeworld, only for the Emperor to steal his thunder in a spectacular way; and Horus - the ''most powerful military leader in the galaxy'' - who was left completely in the dark about why the Emperor was retiring to Terra, leading Horus to the not illogical conclusion that he was being left to do gruntwork while the Emperor sat back and enjoyed the spoils.** On the tabletop itself several armies could lay claim to this. The long suffering Dark Eldar went ''ten years'' without receiving an update. Now that they have a new rulebook and set of models the mantle passes on to the Witchhunters, though their chances of getting an update are [[DemotedToExtra looking grim]].*** Witch Hunters got changed to Sisters of Battle, which then changed to Adepta Sororitas. (Yes, the Sisters used to be a separate faction in the early days. Now they're not.) They got a digital-only release less than two years ago, although it's admittedly been a while since they got new models. The oldest army at this point is the Chaos Space Marines, which got refreshed right at the beginning of 6th edition, less than three years ago. The Inquisition got a digital-only codex a month after the Adepta.** The Necrons were also this, their army was pretty bland, with zero personality and very little to no updates. Now they got a massive change along with a lot of new figures and a revised back story making them more interesting, although there are those who feel that the changes removed what made them scary in the first place.** And then there's everything Games Workshop does that ''isn't'' 40K, which tends to be stepped over because 40K is a massive cash cow and ''TabletopGame/{{Warhammer}}'' and the ''Film/TheHobbit'' or ''Film/TheLordOfTheRings'' strategy battle games are not.* ''TabletopGame/{{Warhammer}}'' has the Beasts of Chaos, the first children of the Dark Gods. Since they are unable to do anything not Chaos-related, while the humans who offer their devotion to Chaos do so willingly, the Dark Gods provide boons and power to the humans while the Beastmen are left to squat in the mud and kill things. Unsurprisingly, they are not happy about this.[[/folder]]

[[folder:Theater]]* Happy Loman in ''Theatre/DeathOfASalesman''.* The title character of Creator/{{Sophocles}}' ''Theatre/{{Electra}}'' is neglected and abused by her mother and step-father. She loathes them both and isn't terribly hesistant about letting it be known. Orestes is also the unfavorite, but has been in exile since childhood so it's not as obvious.* Cordelia becomes this in ''Theatre/KingLear'' when she refuses to kiss up to her father. Of course, [[spoiler: he realizes she's the only one who really loves him after all three of his daughters die, and just before he dies himself of grief.]]** Edmund, the younger, illegitimate son of Gloucester, uses a forged letter to discredit his older half-brother Edgar and seize control of his father's estate and position.* In ''Theatre/TheLionInWinter'', Richard is Henry's Unfavorite. John is Eleanor's Unfavorite. Geoffrey, poor guy, is the Unfavorite to both.* The Broadway show ''Theatre/NextToNormal'' features this trope spectacularly with the song "Superboy and the Invisible Girl" after it is revealed that [[spoiler: the son has been dead the whole time, died when he was eighteen months old, but he haunts the mother throughout the show. She perceives him as a perfect son (while he really has just as many issues as the rest of the family), leaving the living daughter a wreck.]]* In ''Theatre/TheTamingOfTheShrew'', Baptista obviously prefers Bianca to Katerina. [[AlternateCharacterInterpretation Either this is because of]] Katerina's HairTriggerTemper, or Katerina's anger issues are a direct result of having been The Unfavorite to begin with.* Elphaba in ''Theatre/{{Wicked}}'' was blamed by her father for her sister's condition and their mother's death. There's also his words upon seeing Elphaba for the first time. "Take it away. TAKE IT AWAY!"[[/folder]]

[[folder:Video Games]]* This is the motivation of the BigBad of ''VideoGame/{{Drakengard}}'', Manah. Her mother showered her brother Seere with love but abused Manah, finally culminating with abandoning her in a monster-infested canyon for a cult to take. After that, she decided that the only way she could make her mother love her was if the gods themselves loved her. And since GodIsEvil, this entails being infused with their power, ascending to the head of the cult, taking control of TheEmpire, and [[TheEndOfTheWorldAsWeKnowIt destroying the world.]] All [[EnfanteTerrible at no older than six years of age]]. The moral of the story: [[SpaceWhaleAesop don't abuse your children, or they'll destroy the world]].* Beat in ''VideoGame/TheWorldEndsWithYou'' typically sees himself as the Unfavorite of his family, especially compared to his younger sister [[spoiler:Rhyme]]. As a result of being unable to live up to their standards, he stops trying at school altogether, which Neku notes is at odds with the HotBlooded personality he demonstrates.* In ''VideoGame/SilentHillHomecoming'' Alex's younger brother Joshua is clearly the favorite of his parents, to the extent that Alex tells his mother to "stop pretending you care about me" at one point when she tries to apologize to him. It's later revealed that [[spoiler: Alex's parents had to choose one of their children to be sacrificed to Silent Hill's god in order to keep it from destroying Shepherd's Glen. They chose Alex and, knowing he was doomed, purposely remained distant with him to make the inevitable sacrifice easier]].* The titular "Bastard of Kosigan" from a ''VideoGame/NeverwinterNights'' mod, whose situation at home was so uncomfortable for him that he ran off and became a mercenary after his father (the only person defending him from his uncle's abuse) died.* ''VideoGame/DragonAgeII'':** Hawke's younger brother Carver in ''VideoGame/DragonAgeII'' sees himself as this, despite little evidence to support his claims. A classic case of Younger Brother Syndrome. Carver's uncle Gamlen is also one, since [[spoiler:his parents made his sister their sole heir, despite disowning her after she eloped with an apostate (illegal) mage.]]. The game compares the two of them on occasion. It wasn't that Malcolm disliked Carver, indeed Bethany once mentions that their father was proud of "his little soldier", but that Carver's [[MuggleBornOfMages lack of magical ability]] meant that Malcolm had very little time left over to spend with him after making sure his other two children didn't fall prey to the very real dangers of DemonicPossession and PowerIncontinence that plague untrained mages.** Sebastian Vael also has elements of this. As the youngest son of three in the Starkhaven royal family, he envied his brothers and resented the fact that he wasn't even SpareToTheThrone. When he rebelled and became TheHedonist, his parents packed him off to TheChurch of a neighbouring city-state. It's probably not a coincidence that the relative he describes in the most detail is his grandfather.* Liquid Snake from ''VideoGame/MetalGearSolid''. He was so much of an unfavorite of his clonedaddy Big Boss that he swore revenge against his 'superior' twin, commandeered a walking nuclear death-tank, and held the world for ransom for the remains of Big Boss. Talk about family issues.* ''VideoGame/MetalGearSolid2'' had Fatman, who was neglected by his parents, and apparently, even though he built a nuclear bomb at Age 10, and was rather famous (or infamous) within the bomb trade for this feat, he was hated within his own school.* Though it may not be confirmed as we never see his parents,Nozomi Suemitsu aka the Gourmet King from ''{{Persona 3}}'',[[spoiler:he constantly in his older and less rotund bother's shadow]]** VideoGame/{{Persona 4}} takes this trope a step further with Kou Ichijo. [[spoiler: It's revealed that Kou was raised in an OrphanageOfLove and then adopted as a child because his adoptive parents thought they couldn't have any children of their own... until they actually do. When they do, Kou feels that they've literally cast him to the side now that they have a "real" child.]]* Flora, in the ''Franchise/ProfessorLayton'' series, seems like this sometimes because the Professor keeps trying to leave her at home when he goes on investigations, but allows Luke -- who is younger -- to tag along. Although the Professor's reasoning is good (he's unwilling to take a young lady into dangerous situations), it seems a bit wince-worthy, especially since Luke is only the Professor's apprentice and Flora is his actual foster daughter.** Although it's arguably justified by the differences in Flora and Luke's backgrounds. Luke, as the professor's apprentice, is used to solving puzzles and hazarding dangerous situations. Flora has not had that sort of experience, and also is implied to still be recovering from [[spoiler:the trauma of her dad first trying to pass off a robot as a replacement for her mother, then being raised by RidiculouslyHumanRobots after her father's death.]]* In ''VideoGame/{{FEAR}}'', it turns out that [[spoiler: the Point Man]] was the unfavorite grandchild of [[spoiler: Harlan Wade]], as he did not possess the same PsychicPowers of his brother, Paxton Fettel.* If you play ''VideoGame/CrusaderKings 2'', you will most likely have your share of unwanted sons. Daughters are always wanted, no matter how bad their skills and social capabilities are, because you can marry them off to establish alliances, but if you practise primogeniture (eldest son inherits), and your firstborn is an unlikeable fool, it might be a good time to get him killed. ElectiveMonarchy is a possible solution to the problem, but if you choose that inheritance law, every unlanded adult son you have in your court gives you a prestige penalty, meaning you might want to marry them off to some foreign duchess to get them out of your feet, while keeping your intended inheritor around and preparing him to take over after you croak.* In ''VideoGame/FinalFantasyThe4HeroesOfLight'', visiting the past shows you how badly the Chief treated poor Rekoteh. He laments that she's weak compared to her brother Rolan (not that he's a good father to ''him'') and banishes her from the house until she can prove herself by finding the Dragon's Mark.* ''VideoGame/NiNoKuni'' has the princes of Hamelin, Marcassin and Gascon. As children, the younger Marcassin showed extreme magical potential while the elder Gascon had almost none. Thus, their [[TheMagocracy emperor-mage father]] lavished attention on Marcassin while Gascon fell by the wayside. [[BigBrotherInstinct Although he loved his younger brother,]] Gascon believed his father hated him--and despite being very young, Marcassin seemed to know it as well, [[spoiler: hiding his powers in order to make their father pay more attention to Gascon]]. And in the [=PS3=] version, when the party [[TimeyWimeyBall travels back in time to the days of the two young princes,]] [[spoiler: the emperor reveals to Swaine that he knew he was Gascon all along, and [[AlmostDeadGuy as he lay dying in his son's arms,]] [[WellDoneSonGuy tells him he's always loved him]] [[SoProudOfYou and is proud of him regardless.]]]] * In ''Mysteries and Nightmares: Morgiana'' the title character's younger sister Arabella was actually ''given Morgiana's horse'' just because she cried when her own horse broke its leg and had to be put down. Needless to say, this sort of disparity [[{{WickedWitch}} didn't end well]].[[/folder]]

[[folder:Visual Novels]]* In ''VisualNovel/FateStayNight'' Shinji is unwanted by Zouken, who views him as an amusing toy at best because he isn't a magus, making him largely worthless to his grandfather's plans. Shinji's resentment is why he's turned into such a bastard in the present instead of just being kind of annoying like he was in middle school. [[spoiler:The weird thing is that he knows perfectly well that being the favorite is actually much, much worse, but he doesn't really care.]]* Subverted in ''{{Tsukihime}}''. Shiki really was the unfavorite of Makihisa and upon being wounded was promptly disinherited and kicked out. However, that's because not only were they not related - therefore making Shiki incapable of becoming the Tohno family head - Shiki was the son of Nanaya, the guy whose family Makihisa just killed off. He was kept around to take care of SHIKI (Makihisa's favorite) if he happened to Invert.* ''VisualNovel/HigurashiWhenTheyCry'': [[spoiler:Shion Sonozaki]], though much of her ill treatment comes from Oryou, her cruel grandmother. It doesn't end well for her as she becomes Shion's first target in the Cotton Drifting and Eye Opening chapters.** Saddest part? She's supposed to be the ''favorite''. [[spoiler: She and her twin sister Mion did the TwinSwitch at the wrong time, causing the wrong twin to be tattooed with the mark identifying her as the family heir.]]* [[spoiler: Shizune Hakamichi]] turns out to be this in ''VisualNovel/KatawaShoujo'', due to [[spoiler: being deafmute and thus "not normal" in the eyes of her JerkAss father Jigoro.]]* ''VisualNovel/LittleBusters'' has [[spoiler:Haruka]] compared to [[spoiler:her twin sister, Kanata.]] Though it turns out eventually that even if they were favored, the other sibling wasn't much happier.[[/folder]]

[[folder:Web Comics]]* Sil'lice of ''Webcomic/{{Drowtales}}'' was not even acknowledged by her mother Diva'ratrika as someone worthy of even being in the line of her throne and she was largely ignored by her mother. In the end, when Diva'ratrika is betrayed by her three of her daughters, who try their best to kill her and completely undermine her role, Sil'lice is the only one of her daughters who stays true to her mother and her and her entire army of children and grandchild are nearly wiped out for it. [[spoiler: Diva now works with Sil'lice in her attempts to take down her sisters, while not revealing she is her mother reborn in a different body.]]** Vy'chriel was absolutely and understandably despised by her adoptive mother Zala'ess Vel'Sharen. This is because Vy'chriel was adopted into the Vel'Sharen household as a "Protector Twin" who act both as sisters and guardians to the true Vel'Sharen children. Vy'chriel, angered by her twin's disobedience to Zala'ess' orders, killed the real Vy'chriel in single combat, turned her body into a golem and took up her name. Zala'ess, who loved her actual daughter, ''despised'' Vy'chriel for doing this.* Roy Greenhilt from ''Webcomic/TheOrderOfTheStick''. His father's epitaph reads "Devoted Husband - Mighty Wizard - Passable Father", and his ghost keeps showing up to harass Roy about his choice in CharacterClass.** Although it turned out his father wasn't likely the favorite either. Though he only has himself to blame since he looked down on his own father for being a fighter too.*** Eugene harasses Roy chiefly because he doesn't get to go to Lawful Good Heaven until Roy (or another Greenhilt descendant) fulfills the blood oath Eugene made as a younger man. The middle Greenhilt is then supremely incensed when he learns that ''he's'' Lawful Good Heaven's Unfavorite because he abandoned the oath for other pursuits.** Nale for his father Tarquin. In Tarquin's eyes, Nale is nothing but an incompetent over-reaching upstart who cares more about satisfying his ego than about results. Nale is equally contemptuous of his father, seeing him as nothing but an old man too afraid to grasp ultimate power. When Nale finally makes it absolutely clear that he wants nothing from Tarquin and will never be a willing pawn [[spoiler:Tarquin kills him on the spot as. That said, Nale did kill his best friend DeaderThanDead, and made it clear he did not want his father's favor, the only thing that has kept Tarquin from killing him for years. A fact Tarquin tried to get through to him, but Nale's ego wouldn't let him grasp.]]* Wally from ''Webcomic/ZebraGirl'' is a subversion -- while he's at the bottom of his pack of werewolves (and explicitly referred to as the Omega), and constantly teased and berated by his pack-mates, Doyenne, the pack leader, confides in Jack that she feels he has the most potential out of any of the pack, and derides the others as brutish murderers who use their animal sides to excuse the evil in their all-too-human hearts. Of course, in her next breath, she matter-of-factly states how she's going to have to kill them...* Rayne from ''Webcomic/LeastICouldDo'' claims in one strip that he was locked in a cage and fed newspaper as a child. His friends know it's BS, but Mick remarks "his stories amuse me so."* Played with in ''Webcomic/{{Narbonic}}''. Dave's brother Bill is actually a pretty boring, ordinary guy, but Dave is stubbornly convinced that Bill is cooler, better looking, and otherwise superior to him in every way. There's no indication whether this is related to parental favoritism.* ''Webcomic/DominicDeegan'': Miranda Deegan has pretty much disavowed any knowledge of her oldest son Jacob. Her reasons aren't entirely unjustfied, though; [[spoiler: Jacob took up necromancy after one of her oldest enemies attacked her home and gravely wounded her youngest son, Gregory, whom Jacob would use as a guinea pig for several horrible experiments - one of which almost killing Gregory in the process.]] And, uh...yeah.** Earlier on, we have Luna Travoria, youngest of four daughters and [[HollywoodHomely (slightly) deformed]]. Her older sisters and bitter crone of a mother abused her day in and day out. [[spoiler:As the second story arc starts up, [[MyDeathIsJustTheBeginning her mother plans to have Luna commit suicide while a royal knight is visiting in order to claim a huge compensation payoff from the kingdom.]]]]* Liquid Snake, in the AU ''VideoGame/MetalGearSolid'' fancomic series [[http://zarla.deviantart.com/art/Les-Enfants-Terribles-38063076 "Les Enfants Terribles."]] [[http://zarla.deviantart.com/art/Les-Enfants-Terribles-14-96287462 Solidus gets this treatment too]], but to a lesser extent.** This also occurs in the webcomic ''Webcomic/TheLastDaysOfFoxhound''. Hell it occured in the games as well.* Black Mage from ''Webcomic/EightBitTheater'', [[http://www.nuklearpower.com/2005/02/22/episode-518-iced/ apparently]]** Red Mage too, although technically that was [[spoiler:entirely concocted and implanted in his mind by Thief.]]* Riff from ''Webcomic/SluggyFreelance'' is the Unfavorite to his stepbrother (who is apparently his mother's new husband's son). When said stepbrother asks if he is better than Riff, his mother tells him that it's not nice to "rub it in". Riff is thus somewhat pleased, albeit humiliated, when Bun-bun and Kiki's attempt to stand in for him at a party with a mechanical look-alike fails and results in him getting disowned.* Mizuna of ''Webcomic/{{Adventurers}}'' '''thinks''' she's one of these, bringing up how she was always compared with Karashi when younger. When she mentions this to Karashi, the latter says that the comparisons were always ''favorable''; eg. "Mizuna is so much more advanced than Karashi was at her age!"* [[CainAndAbel Isaac Jenner]] from ''Webcomic/{{Demonology 101}}'', both in the eyes of his father and The Powers That Be. This is his primary reason for his numerous attempts to murder his brother Gabriel.* Monette of ''Webcomic/SomethingPositive'' was the Unfavorite of her biological father (we're not quite sure where her mother is in all of this). When her father gained custody of her and her sisters, he dropped her off at her grandmother's house. While Grandma was on vacation. Grandma also kept pit bulls. And her father tied raw steaks to her head. Oh, and did we mention that at the time she was less than a year old? Of course, being ''SomethingPositive'', this is generally played for laughs; however, it's given genuine emotion when her father visits her for Thanksgiving at the [=MacIntire=] residence in Texas. His ill treatment of her is what prompts Faye and Fred to adopt her and make her ''their'' daughter.* In ''Webcomic/InstantClassic'', when Author is born, he has an unexpected twin brother. His parents are dismayed, the father going so far as to name the boy Xauthor, declaring him to be the ''evil twin'' at birth and treating him accordingly through his entire childhood and early adulthood, despite him not doing anything remotely evil [[spoiler: until he snaps due to being told he's evil for YEARS]] He's also got a goatee.* ''Webcomic/WhatBirdsKnow'' has Dores, stuck in the shadow of her brother Ian. Her family completely fails to recognize her talents, seeing her instead as a lazy, irresponsible and ill-tempered brat. Her mother is by ''far'' the worst about this, to the point that when the parents are worrying about their daughters [[spoiler: taking several days too long to return from their errand]], she argues ''against'' sending help, muttering that she'll just ground Dores later, and freaks out when Ian volunteers to help. "This is not going to happen!"* Ann "Bootsie" Khoeler in ''Webcomic/FriendlyHostility''; her parents praise her brother for doing so wonderfully at college, and continue to praise him when he reveals he sold her as a slave to cover his poker debts.* {{Concession}}: Joel's father preferred his older brother Julian and left him the entire company in his will. While the author claims these implications were just meant as gags, there are hints that his mother would have preferred a daughter; Joel's twin sister Miranda died when they were young, so it's possible he feels his mother would rather he had died. [[UnreliableNarrator According to Joel]], the situation is even worse; [[spoiler: he was so traumatised by the death that he was put in a mental hospital. While there, Joel became convinced that their older brother Julian had killed Miranda and their parents thought Joel had done it. Understandably, he's severely messed up by the time the main storyline starts.]]* Brisbane of ''Webcomic/YouSayItFirst'' is one of these. We never see his parents, but hear that they seem to hate him. They didn't attend his wedding and the fact that all they did was sign the card Brisbane's brother added to his gift is treated like a huge step in repairing the relationship. He also sadly told his wife that she would be able to meet them, but he wouldn't be allowed to be there.* ''Webcomic/BatmanAndSons'' play around with this a bit. What's clear is that Terry is the favorite, being Batman's biological son. At first glance, any Robin could be the unfavorite, considering how Batman treats them but there are PetTheDog moments between Batman and the Robins. The true unfavorite is [[spoiler: Damien, who Batman flat out refuses to acknowledge as his unless Talia produces a positive DNA test.]]* Kevin of ''Webcomic/KevinAndKell'' faces this, exacerbated by being one of 38 siblings, meaning that he only stands out in the worst possible ways. As a child, he was looked down upon for being fearless (which is considered TooDumbToLive by rabbits), and when he got older, he was disowned for marrying Kell, a predator.* Sal Walkerton in ''WebComic/DumbingOfAge'' has always felt overshadowed by her twin brother, who is both BrilliantButLazy and [[spoiler: "whiter" than her - they're mixed-race, but Walky himself considers ''her'' black and himself "generically beige".]] By her teens, she was so starved for attention that she had a breakdown and [[NotHelpingYourCase held up two convenience stores]], at which point her parents shipped her off to Catholic school. [[/folder]]

[[folder:Web Original]]* ''SurvivalOfTheFittest'' has Lyn "Laeil" Burbank. While actually a niece rather than a daughter, her uncle and aunt still give her the same unfavorite treatment, treating her like something that just has to be tolerated, while lavishing all their attention on her JerkJock cousin, Anthony, who regularily makes her life hell. Once she's on the island, though, it isn't long before she gets [[CainAndAbel bloody revenge]] on him.* Both WebVideo/TheNostalgiaCritic and WebVideo/AskThatGuyWithTheGlasses were told regularly they weren't wanted, giving them mass issues. The Other Guy, the older brother, is fairly normal in comparison and seems to have been treated better.* In ''Literature/MotherOfLearning'', Zorian's parents disapprove of his lack of interest in the family business and by his poor charisma.* In ''WebAnimation/IfTheEmperorHadATextToSpeechDevice'', Magnus the Red is pretty clearly Emperor's least favorite son (aside from [[InsistentTerminology Fucking]] Horus). Magnus certainly feels that way.-->'''Custodian''': Oh! So... Everything is Magnus's fault?\\'''God-Emperor''':''' DEFINITELY. IF I COULD, I'D BRUTALLY SPANK MAGNUS UNTIL HIS ASS WOULD TURN SO RED THAT HIS FACE WOULD LOOK PALE IN COMPARISON.'''** He also seems to hate his other son, Roboute, ordering to have his life support cut the moment he hears that he's still semi-alive. ** In fact, he seems to hate ''all'' his Primarch sons, save [[HeroicSacrifice Sanguinius]]. Compounding the ''massive'' issues the Emperor had with his children as stated above in the canonical universe, [[{{Hypocrite}} he sees himself as a great father]] and fails to realize why any of them should have rebelled (he fondly recalls the above incident with Angron as fucking hilarious, just for starters) and when bitterly discussing the issues with the Custodes Captain-General, he skewers loyalist and traitor alike; from his viewpoint, every Primarch was massively flawed. * In ''Podcast/WelcomeToNightVale'', football player Michael Sandero gains a second head and supernaturally enhanced abilities and his mother announces that she likes the new head better and updates her billboard "Which Of My Children I Like Best" accordingly. Michael is The Unfavorite versus his other head. It becomes an ExaggeratedTrope when in a later episode, [[spoiler:his mother has the original head amputated.]]* Strong Sad serves this to Strong Bad from ''WebAnimation/HomestarRunner''* Tacoma from WebVideo/DemoReel has a big family, and just about all of them abuse him emotionally for being a WhiteSheep who brought down his dad's ponzi scheme.* The Faceless Ghost in ARG/EscapeFromEdenPark is an angry, spiteful spirit, holding onto her anger and jealousy at her older sister, who overshadowed her while they were both alive.* Amy Dallon of ''Literature/{{Worm}}'' is well aware that her adoptive mother Carol greatly favors her biological daughter, Vicky, and in fact has never truly accepted Amy due to her massive trust issues. Her adoptive father Mark at least tries but his chronic depression renders him unreliable.* Cooler in ''WebVideo/DragonBallZAbridged'' is this compared to his younger brother Freeza, who was always favored and spoiled by their father King Cold. Goku [[SympathyForTheDevil actually shows sympathy for how his father treated him]], and one of the [[BerserkButton few ways to get under his skin is to compare him to Freeza in any way, shape or form]].-->''"My brother would have stood around postulating and claiming his victory like some haughty greenhorn child. I know what it takes to get the job done. Which is why father should have...!"''[[/folder]]

[[folder:Western Animation]]* In ''A Miser Brothers Christmas'' it's clear that both Snow Miser and Heat Miser fit into this category among Mother Nature's children.* ''WesternAnimation/AmericanDad'':** An episode Stan has trying to get rid of his annoying Chinese in-laws by convincing Francine that, as an adopted child, she's the Un-Favorite compared to their birth daughter Gwen. At first she's skeptical, but then Stan finds her parents' will, in which they leave everything to Gwen. But even after being thrown out, Francine's father saves Stan from a burning building, and he explains the will by saying "[Gwen]'s an [[AsianAirhead idiot]]! She needs all the help she can get!", but Francine is intelligent and can take care of herself, [[SugarWiki/HeartwarmingMoments and she has a good husband]], so they know she'll be fine.** Steve and Hayley switch off being this, depending on the episode, but more often than not, Hayley fits it better. Mostly due to her extreme liberalism, her rebellious attitude, her dating and marrying Jeff, etc, she tends to get Stan's dislike often.* ''WesternAnimation/AvatarTheLastAirbender'':** Zuko of: "My father says [my sister] was born lucky -- he says I was lucky to be born..."** Azula, Zuko's little sister, is also an example, at least in her own mind: "My own mother...thought I was a monster." She tries to laugh it off at the time, but this perception of her relationship with her mother [[spoiler:contributes heavily to her VillainousBreakdown in the series finale]].** Ozai himself, father of both of the above, used to be this too. After his older brother Iroh's son died, his father Azulon ordered him to kill Zuko to let him know what it feels like. To put this into perspective, though, Fire Lord Azulon only ordered this after Ozai tried to use his nephew Lu Ten's death as an excuse to steal his brother's birthright, and after he openly scoffed at Iroh's grief for his lost son causing him to abandon the siege of Ba Sing Se. Still...ouch! Of course, considering he was perfectly willing to kill Zuko, it probably wouldn't have done much good.** Let's face it, [[RoyallyScrewedUp that whole family is a mess.]]... Except for Ursa and Iroh, and they still have more than one issue. Zuko eventually matured and [[CallingTheOldManOut said 'screw you' to Ozai]], but ONLY after much CharacterDevelopment.** The series implies that Mai's parents treat their younger son Tom-Tom much better than her. When Mai was a little girl, she was forced to be stiff and rigid at all times, never showing any emotion, in case it damaged her father's political career (leading into her emotionally-stunted teenage years). By the time Tom-Tom was born, her father was already a governor and given control over an entire "colony" (said colony being a conquered Earth Kingdom City), so they're free to be more expressive and affectionate with him... and Mai is still neglected.*** On the other hand, there's Ty Lee. Taking care of sextuplet daughters is no easy task, yeah, but Ty Lee herself felt so neglected that she ran away to a circus to get something similar to love and affection. Heck, in The Beach she angrily and tearfully confronts Mai on how she used to be an only kid and had her parents's attention, only for Mai to snarkily and bitterly point out the emotional neglect she dealed with.* In the SequelSeries ''WesternAnimation/TheLegendOfKorra'' this is implied to be the case with [[spoiler: Tarrlok. His older brother [[BigBad Noatak/Amon]] was stated to be a ChildProdigy, and consequently was favored by their father Yakone. [[AbusiveParents Parental Favortism was just the tip of the iceberg in that family though]].]]** Tenzin's older siblings, big brother Bumi and sister Kya, also had this issue since their father Avatar Aang, intentionally or not, prioritized Tenzin over them because he was the only air bender between the three (Kya being a water bender and Bumi being a non-bender [[spoiler:only to become an air-bender himself later in life]]). This ended up damaging the relationship between the three siblings considerably since Bumi and Kya ended up treating Tenzin badly whenever they could. Evidently though, Bumi got the shortest end of the stick overall, as Kya was quite clearly the favorite of their mother, Katara.** Lin Bei Fong and her younger half sister Suyin also had some un-favoritism issues due to their mother Toph neglecting them. * In ''WesternAnimation/TheBoondocks'', we learn that Uncle Ruckus was the unfavorite son of his father, Mister Ruckus; an overall {{abusive| parent}}, {{alcoholic| parent}} {{jerkass}} who inflicted the most beatings upon him. Uncle's younger brothers also received quite a lot of torment from their dad, but not nearly as much as Uncle did. * In ''WesternAnimation/TheBuzzOnMaggie'' Jerk Jock Aldrin is revealed to be this. He's spent at least 8 summers as the work force on his uncle's farm while his younger, cuter siblings Maggie, and later, Pupert are given the favorite hat and all the privileges related to it. The first time the Uncle looks like he's going to praise Aldrin for developing more muscles, he ruins the moment by determining this means the teenager can do even MORE heavy-lifting. It's much better at home, where all children are given praise and acceptance at some point. The mom does express more concern about Aldrin's grades than she does over Maggie's (but then again, Aldrin may need a tutor to maintain eligibility for sports) but she also praises her son for taking an after-school job in fast-food. Still, the uncle's behavior goes a long way towards explaining Aldrin's "Look at me!" attitude and tendency to show off.* In ''WesternAnimation/CampLazlo'', there are strong indications that Edward is this in his family.* Ed from ''WesternAnimation/EdEddNEddy'' is presumed to be mistreated by his mother on many occasions, while his little sister [[SpoiledBrat Sarah]] gets whatever she wants. * Before ''WesternAnimation/EvilConCarne'' was cancelled, and ''WesternAnimation/TheGrimAdventuresOfBillyAndMandy'' became their separate series, one episode involved a father, his older and younger sons, and their pet weasel accidentally finding themselves trapped on Evil Con Carne's island. Needless to say, the father had a less than favorable relationship (on his part) with his older son, whom he showed was willing to allow being potentially tortured by Con Carne and his cohorts when forcing his obedience. This is of course played for laughs. He even entrusts the pet WEASEL to drive the boat away from Con Carne's island to safety.* Sometime between the original run of ''WesternAnimation/FamilyGuy'' and the [[UnCancelled current series]], Meg Griffin went from mildly ignored to outright hated by the rest of her family (caused in part by the running joke that Meg may or may not be the result of an affair Lois had behind Peter's back,) which in turn cost her a chance to become an Olympic swimmer. Lampshaded in that the show itself has pointed out her unpopularity via doing an entire episode around the family being the subject of a reality tv show. In the episode, the people filming the Griffins point out that Meg is the least liked member of the family, resulting in her being replaced with an attractive actress. And this episode was ''before'' the UnCancelled portion.** You could go on for days about the ComedicSociopathy Peter and Lois inflict on poor Meg. Lois in particular; she tried to steal Meg's boyfriend in one episode, couldn't even say "I love you" to the girl on her own wedding day, and ''tried to get her to kill herself''[[note]]She left a bottle of sleeping pills and an Creator/EmilyDickinson book next to Meg and said "Whatever happens, happens" in a bored tone of voice[[/note]]. In one memorable episode, Meg [[TheReasonYouSuckSpeech calls them and Chris out]] on how they treat her like shit despite being disgusting, horrible excuses for human beings... but then goes right back to being their punching bag after seeing that without her as a common "enemy", the family would rip each other to shreds.* A large part of the plot of the first ''Literature/{{Franklin}}'' movie, ''Franklin and the Green Knight'', is Franklin worrying that he'll become this when his new baby sister is born. This worry is only increased when everyone fawns over the upcoming baby during a baby shower. Later, this fear is soothed when he meets an armadillo with a baby brother who tells him that his parents have enough love for both him and his brother. Franklin's friend Snail has a similar fear - he worries that Franklin won't have any time for him once the baby is born. Oh, and Franklin's worries being soothed turns out to be reasonable, as there is no evidence in the fifth and sixth seasons of the show (both of which feature a version of Franklin's new sister, Harriet, that is able to talk and walk), that either child is treated as a favorite.* On ''WesternAnimation/{{Futurama}}'' it's pretty clear Larry is [[CorruptCorporateExecutive Mom]]'s least favorite son, and that's saying something to mother who treats all her sons like the Three Stooges.* Lifeline from the ''WesternAnimation/GIJoeARealAmericanHero'' series is a latecomer to this trope, having become the Unfavorite of his all-pacifist family when he joined a military organization. Never mind that he's a field medic who never carries weapons or participates in combat, the fact it's ''soldiers'' he saves is enough to earn him the permanent silent treatment from his relatives.* PJ on ''WesternAnimation/GoofTroop'', while treated fairly by his mother, is routinely emotionally and financially abused by his father who repeatedly spoils his sister, Pistol, and, on one occasion, [[WhyAreYouNotMySon rejects him in favor of his best friend]]. In the episode "And Baby Makes Three" he tries extra hard to avoid becoming this compared to [[MistakenForPregnant the new baby]], as does Pistol eventually, but he and she both seem to take it for granted that she is ''already'' treated better.* In ''WesternAnimation/GravityFalls'' Dipper thinks he is Grunkle Stan's unfavorite (and is wrong), and Stan himself absolutely was the unfavorite in comparison to [[spoiler: his own twin, back when they were kids.]]* In the AnimatedSeries of Disney's ''Disney/{{Hercules}}'', one episode centered around Phil, Herc's Satyr Mentor, coming to terms with his mother always raising his brother (a door-to-door shoe salesman) onto a pedastal. At the end of the episode they learn she was doing it on purpose to keep him from getting a big head, and the brother always got the same treatment.** The very end of that same episode hints that Phil's sister gets the same treatment. Pretty fair all around.* Helga Pataki from ''WesternAnimation/HeyArnold'' is the poster child for this trope, with her prettier, more intelligent, and away-at-college older sister Olga. Ironically, Olga herself confesses to Helga that '''she'd rather be this trope''': [[StageMom her parents' excessive attention]] and ''ridiculously'' high expectations (especially Bob's) pushed Olga [[NervousWreck into a permanent neurosis]] and becoming an ExtremeDoormat, while Helga might be ignored by them but managed to both develop a thicker skin and is free to do whatever she wants. Making this even more horrible is that their father calls Helga, Olga sometimes.* In an episode of ''WesternAnimation/JonnyQuestTheRealAdventures'', Jonny is trapped in a hallucination where he thinks he is the unfavorite and that his father prefers Jessie. This ends when his father punches the hallucination's lights out.* ''WesternAnimation/JohnnyTest'' serves this to his very uptight father, Hugh.* Hank Hill from ''WesternAnimation/KingOfTheHill'' is the Unfavorite of his two brothers. His older brother, an illegitimate child born of Cotton Hill's affair with a woman in Japan, gains a surprising amount of affection since his mother is perhaps the only person Cotton ever genuinely loved. His younger brother Good Hank was born when Cotton was in his seventies, and at the right age to appreciate having children. Meanwhile, Hank was born in a bathroom in New York, not Texas (which, it should be noted, was Cotton's own fault), and Cotton never quite forgave him for failing to be a native Texan, hating him literally since the day he was born. Being saddled with a {{Jerkass}} father like Cotton affected Hank well into adulthood and left him with his uptight, close-minded personality.* ''WesternAnimation/LooneyTunes: Beaky Buzzard seems to be this in the eyes of his mother. Obviously this stems from Beaky being less competent than his brothers.-->'''Mother Buzzard''': Come Killer, stop making a fool of schnitzel. Why couldn't you be smart like your brothers?* ''WesternAnimation/TheLooneyTunesShow'': We learn that Sylvester is this in his family in "Point, Laser Point".* An example of the second variant is in ''WesternAnimation/{{Metalocalypse}}'': Pickles, the drummer of the most famous and successful band in history, lead singer of the (arguably) ''other'' most famous and successful band in history, apparent college graduate despite being an alcoholic since he was ''six'', is still second in his parents' eyes to his brother, an ex-con who lives in their attic, sponges off everyone he knows, is responsible for destroying Australia, ''and works for the company Pickles owns''.** Further expanded in Fatherklok, where Pickles' father straight out calls him trash.** And again in Motherklok, appropriately enough. Pickles still seeks the approval of his mother, despite the fact that no matter what he does, even when it's exactly what she says he should do, she isn't satisfied. [[spoiler: He finally tells her to go f[[SoundEffectBleep *riff*k]] herself at the end of the episode.]] It also represents a rare moment of growth for an adult Unfavorite, especially considering the quasi-demonic powers the band seems to have; he resolves the issue with his mother without turning evil or lashing out at the people who care about him. Even ''Offdensen'', the closest person the band has to a moral center, tells him he should [[spoiler: tell his mother to go f[[SoundEffectBleep *riff*k]] herself.]] As an added bonus, her reaction is a lot more realistic than shows where the parent rushes to fix a misunderstanding or prove how much they don't care by not reacting at all.* Andy French is implied to be this in ''WesternAnimation/MissionHill'', since his parents spent all their time doting over Kevin. Andy is so detached from his parents he ''doesn't even know their phone number''.* Bloberta was revealed to be this on ''WesternAnimation/MoralOrel''. Her mother preferred her sister Modella and younger brother Lunchbox over her as they were much better singers. Her father was shown to care about her, but afraid to speak up [[HenpeckedHusband in front of her mother.]]* On ''WesternAnimation/PennZeroPartTimeHero'', Rippen mentions that part of his rise to villainy was that he was this to his sister Vlurgen.* In ''WesternAnimation/PepperAnn'', Nicky is convinced she's the Unfavorite, though a lot of it is circumstantial (and the fact that people ''other than'' her parents really do tend to favor her sister). For example, when they were kids, the exercise equipment was put in Nicky's room... because it was either put it there or in her sister's room, and they feared the sister, who has very weak arms, would be much more insulted by it than the surprisingly-strong Nicky.* [[MadScientist Dr. Doofenshmirtz]] on ''WesternAnimation/PhineasAndFerb''. His mother preferred his younger brother Roger (more because said brother was better at kickball), while his father preferred the family dog naming it "Only Son". * Suga Mama on ''WesternAnimation/TheProudFamily'' tends to favor her son, Bobby over Oscar, despite the fact that Oscar is clearly the more successful of the two. Then again, Oscar is the ButtMonkey of the series. It's later revealed that Suga Mama went through the same thing with her sister Spice, who got the family's hereditary psychic power while she did not.** In the same episode with Spice in a SugarWiki/{{Heartwarming Moment|s}} Suga Mama stands up for Oscar, showing him that while she doesn't always like him she will always love him.* In WesternAnimation/RegularShow "Don" (Season 1), Benson hires Rigby's taller, younger, and popular brother Don to help file the income tax returns online and avoid an audit. Rigby's unpleasant childhood memories include Don being the life of Rigby's birthday party, Rigby being left alone at the seesaw and a three-legged race, as well as being crowded out of a photo booth picture.* Robot Default of ''WesternAnimation/RobotAndMonster'' is typically overlooked by his mother in favor of his AloofBigBrother Gart, who also owns the family's blinking light factory after having it handed down from their father, primarily because Robot's inventions tend to rarely work as intended and he has a knack for accidentally embarrassing the family name. In the episode "Family Business" it's suggested she actually does care for him somewhat; when he finds a piece of a family painting with himself on it in her chest compartment it's later revealed that it's only there so her insides don't clunk, then when Gart is about to tell Robot [[ThrowTheDogABone she decides to let him keep thinking what he thought at first, feeling he deserves it for his earlier]] BatmanGambit that showed he cares for his family regardless of how they treat him.* ''WesternAnimation/{{Rugrats}}'' played with this a couple times. In one episode, Angelica convinces the twins Phil and Lil that every family has a Favorite and a Reject; each one spent the rest of the episode convinced that they were the Reject, and mistaking normal parental behavior as signs of this, until, in the end, they make up and decide to be Rejects together (and Angelica even decides to become a Reject). In another, Angelica's parents are going to have another baby, and she has a horrible dream about being rejected in favor of it (until it [[AttackOfThe50FootWhatever grows gigantic]] and tries to eat her).** This was quite the plot point of ''WesternAnimation/TheRugratsMovie''. After Dil's birth, Tommy felt abandoned by his parents and attempted to return him to the hospital with the help of his friends, only to later grow fond of Dil and accept him.** In one episode after the movie, Tommy starts to feel like the unfavorite out of his friends after Angelica teaches them how to cry and fake injuries to get attention from Tommy's parents, but Tommy won't do it. The parents are fussing over the other kids, but Stu does take a moment to apologise to Tommy and say he's glad there's nothing wrong with him. It's kind of sweet, but also sad.* It depends on the writer, but each of ''WesternAnimation/TheSimpsons'' kids has, at one point or another, been treated as the unfavorite, but the major example is Bart. His parents both prefer Lisa over him. Homer explicitly says that Lisa is his favorite multiple times and Marge is often too pre-occupied with Maggie although she does admit to a new neighbour that she breastfed Lisa when she was baby but didn't breastfeed Bart or Maggie. Even at a young age he was second fiddle to Lisa with nobody understanding his anger, this subject is the main theme of the episode "Barthood". In the episode "How Lisa Got Her Marge Back", Homer told Bart that while he does love him but if there was a second Bart he'd hang himself. Unlike everybody else though, Bart has a good relationship with Grampa and he wonders why parents are nicer to their grandchildren than their actual children in "Holidays of Future Passed".* In ''WesternAnimation/TUFFPuppy'', Kitty's mother wishes that she was more like her sister, Katty, even though said sister ''is'' a criminal.* Hank Venture from ''WesternAnimation/TheVentureBrothers'' While in the first season Dr. Venture seemed equally neglectful towards both sons, the following ones made his ParentalFavoritism towards Dean more and more apparent. This has become especially prominent in season 4 after [[spoiler:the clone slugs were destroyed and Brock left]] - Dr. Venture wised up and decided to be more fatherly, but only towards Dean.** In one episode, when tricked into thinking he's been kidnapped along with the boys, Dr. Venture even tells the kidnappers to torture Hank but not Dean. Later he explains that he suggested that because Hank could deal with it while Dean, the more immature of the two, would take it way too seriously. He also explains that the reason he's so hard on Hank is because he reminds him of himself when he was younger (after hearing this, Hank doesn't quite seem to know how to feel about it). Also it should be mentioned that being his dad's favorite is probably screwing up Dean worse.** In truth, it frequently zigzags between the two of them. Dr. Venture seems to prefer Hank in an adventuring context, and Dean in a scientific context. Needless to say, he's not the greatest father. Of course, given that his ''own'' [[HilariouslyAbusiveChildhood upbringing included]] his father having drunken sex ''[[ItMakesSenseInContext on top of his son]]'', Rusty easily has a FreudianExcuse.** Not too surprisingly, Hank has latched onto Brock as a ParentalSubstitute.* ''WesternAnimation/WhatsNewScoobyDoo'': Randy Dinwittie. His mother only cares about making his siblings Andy and Mandy [[FormerChildStar famous again]] and his accomplishments mean nothing to her except when she can use his skills to improve Andy and Mandy's career [[spoiler:no matter if it's by hook or by crook]].* In ''WesternAnimation/WolverineAndTheXMen'', Magneto rules Genosha with his two daughters, Lorna/Polaris and the Wanda/Scarlet Witch, by his side. Pietro/Quicksilver, meanwhile, is back in the US running the Brotherhood of Evil Mutants until he's "proved himself" to his father. Even when Wanda starts to fall out with her father, he dismisses his sons requests to aid him and is instead told to get his sister to come to her senses.** In ''WesternAnimation/XMenEvolution'', Magneto basically dumps Wanda in an insane asylum when she's 8 or so. His reasoning was that unlike her brother, her almost uncontrollable powers would have eaten away at too much of his time. Later when she comes after him wanting revenge, he decides to have a psychic alter her memories to make her less likely to come after him. He still never visits her though (Unlike her brother, who was given a cell phone so they can keep in touch).** Which of the twins are the Unfavorite changes with the medium and writer... though generally it doesn't really matter who is less loved because Magneto is almost always a ''terrible'' father to both of them, regardless of writer or medium. To be ''somewhat'' fair, in the original continuity he didn't even meet them until they were almost adults, and didn't discover that they were actually his children until even later... but that poofs away because he ''still'' treated them like crap even before knowing it. Only in the animated 90's series he is given a consistently more sympathetic POV about it.*** Cyclops also had some of this in ''Wolverine and the X-Men'' where, rightly or wrongly, Xavier pretty much kicked him to the curb by demoting him to being just another X-mook while promoting Wolverine to leader and always finding time to smother the clawed one with love and support while leaving Cyclops out in the cold. * Saranoia and Carl from the show ''WesternAnimation/YinYangYo'' are both the unfavorites to their parent(s). It caused Saranoia to go quite insane while Carl has yet to go down that road, he's just very lonely and desperate.[[/folder]]

[[folder: Real Life]]* A lot of kids have suspicions that they might be this.* Sadly, truth in television, for a number of reasons.** A study indicated that most parents do, in fact, have favorites. Equal treatment or attempts at same aside, most people are people and just relate more to one kid or the other, and therefore prefer to spend time with him or her and pursue their shared interests.** If the child shows signs of disobedience, has strong opinions, strong will, does not live up to expectations of his parents, fails to perform well in school, hobbies, social circles or does not fulfill the parents' demands, he has good chances of ending up as the Unfavorite.** Often happens to children with sexuality or gender issues. ** Many times the favorite can be the child who is always in trouble as they are often seen as the baby, or needing extra attention, while the harder working and smarter child has more pressure constantly put on them.** When the parents had certain unfulfilled expectations. For example, if a family wanted one boy, one girl, and the firstborn was a girl so the second one was supposed to be a boy, but turned out not to be, then there would likely be a great deal of resentment against her.** In families that are poorer, oftentimes when they have one child, they'll be able to afford new clothes and such for that child, but when the second one comes along, being able to afford to take care of both will undoubtedly be harder, so the second child ends up with a lot of hand-me-downs from their older sibling, which can lead to them feeling like they are loved less, particularly when they're at an age when they can't really understand financial issues.** Some studies suggest the oldest child in a family is more prone to be the favourite by default. Parents spend more time navigating their job as parents with the first-born, tend to feed them better and pay more attention to physical development, then sort of coast with later children once they know the basic motions. Sometimes, however, this has the exact ''opposite'' effect. If the parents made some particularly bad mistakes the first-born can feel like they were the "test child" and their younger siblings get treated better as a result.** If one child has some sort of disability or chronic illness, then the other siblings can often feel like this, due to the extra time, attention, and focus that the child with needs gets.** In some cultures, disabled kids themselves are, because they are seen as cursed or affected by dark magic, or as a burden.* Families both royal and common in general would've been prone to this in the past, as later children would had to deal with the first-born inheriting the family wealth while they got less, if any. And royals would naturally give the most attention to the heir to the throne (firstborn, usually).* In certain cultures, daughters. In some countries, it is common for women to have abortions if the child is the "wrong gender." This has actually gone so far in mainland China as to have started to ''flip'' the preferred gender -- used to be, sons were preferred because they could continue the family line. Now, however, GenderRarityValue has kicked in: it's become rather expensive to marry off a son.** The Chinese traditionally favored large families, and in relation to this trope, that gives a bigger pool to choose the Favorite or Heir from. You sure as heck don't want to be the Unfavorite.* Animals do this a lot. Strong, healthy young have better survival chances than runts, and for this reason are often favored by parents. Sick young are often rejected, as nature won't allow time to be wasted on a baby that will not survive. Even species that don't usually do it will if food is scarce or if they have more than they can feed -- especially mammals, who only have so many teats to go around, like in ''CharlottesWeb''. Marsupials, for example, have young that latch onto a teat and stay there for weeks or months. If there are more babies than teats, the extras must be abandoned. Sometimes, even other young will attack small or sick offspring, especially if food is scarce-birds and live-bearer sharks (whose young eat each other inside the womb at times).* According to the history... Date Masamune, despite being the rightful heir of the Date clan and quite liked by his father, is the Unfavorite for his mother. Thanks to him [[EyeScream plucking his eye out]], she has deemed him unworthy to inherit the clan and favors his younger brother. This has gotten so bad that at one point [[EvilMatriarch his mother tries poisoning his food just so he'd die and his brother could take over]]. Masamune's response? [[KickTheDog Kill his brother]] just so his mother can see him rule, like it or not. After his father's death, he ends up banishing his mother to her home clan (his allies, which also goes on to be one of his most trusted allies in Sekigahara).* Wilhelm II, [[WorldWarOne the last emperor of the German Empire]], was despised by his mother (who even openly refused to write him birthday gratulations), as well as his grandmother, UsefulNotes/QueenVictoria. This may have been a [[FreudianExcuse major contributing factor]] for him to grow up to be arsehole enough to declare war on one of his closest cousins, "[[RomanovsAndRevolutions Nikki]]").** Wilhelm felt very close and dearly loved his grandmother Victoria, who died in his arms. It would seem ''she'' got along better with him than with her son, the Prince of Wales, who appears to have been her least favorite child. Wilhelm on the other hand occupied a special space in her heart because he was the only one of her grandchildren who remembered her late husband, Prince Albert. This may have contributed to the deep antipathy between Edward VII and Wilhelm II.* LindsayLohan's siblings Cody (aka Dakota), Ali and Michael Jr. are apparently this to their father.* When future writer Robert Benchley's older brother was killed during the Spanish-American War, his mother's first response upon getting the news was "Why couldn't it have been Robert?!" -- in his presence. [[/folder]]